Litcius/Paper detail

Reverse Janssen Effect in Narrow Granular Columns

Shivam Mahajan, Michael Tennenbaum, Sudhir N. Pathak, Devontae C. Baxter, Xiaochen Fan, Pablo Padilla, Caleb J. Anderson, Alberto Fernández‐Nieves, Massimo Pica Ciamarra

2020Physical Review Letters31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

When grains are added to a cylinder, the weight at the bottom is smaller than the total weight of the column, which is partially supported by the lateral walls through frictional interactions with the grains. This is known as the Janssen effect. Via a combined experimental and numerical investigation, here we demonstrate a reverse Jansen effect whereby the fraction of the weight supported by the base overcomes one. We characterize the dependence of this phenomenon on the various control parameters involved, rationalize the physical process causing the emergence of the compressional frictional forces responsible for the anomaly, and introduce a model to reproduce our findings. Contrary to prior assumptions, our results demonstrate that the constitutive relation on a material element can depend on the applied stress.

Topics & Concepts

Granular materialMechanicsBase (topology)Materials scienceAnomaly (physics)CylinderConstitutive equationStress (linguistics)PhysicsFinite element methodThermodynamicsMathematicsComposite materialCondensed matter physicsGeometryMathematical analysisPhilosophyLinguisticsGranular flow and fluidized bedsGeotechnical and Geomechanical EngineeringGeotechnical Engineering and Soil Mechanics