Abstract

Many dense particulate suspensions show a stress induced transformation from a liquidlike state to a solidlike shear jammed (SJ) state. However, the underlying particle-scale dynamics leading to such striking, reversible transition of the bulk remains unknown. Here, we study transient stress relaxation behaviour of SJ states formed by a well-characterized dense suspension under a step strain perturbation. We observe a strongly nonexponential relaxation that develops a sharp discontinuous stress drop at short time for high enough peak-stress values. High resolution boundary imaging and normal stress measurements confirm that such stress discontinuity originates from the localized plastic events, whereas system spanning dilation controls the slower relaxation process. We also find an intriguing correlation between the nature of transient relaxation and the steady-state shear jamming phase diagram obtained from the Wyart-Cates model.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call