The role of the friction coefficients in the granular segregation in small systems

2020 ◽  
Vol 372 ◽  
pp. 40-47
Author(s):  
Xiaohan Song ◽  
Guohui Zhang
2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (10) ◽  
pp. 1508-1517
Author(s):  
L.A. Torres-Cruz ◽  
J.C. Santamarina

The probability of failure of tailing dams and associated risks demand improvements in engineering practice. The critical state line provides a robust framework for the characterization of mine tailings. New experimental data for nonplastic platinum tailings and a large database for tailings and nonplastic soils (grain size between 2 and 500 μm) show that the critical state parameters for nonplastic tailings follow the same trends as nonplastic soils as a function of particle-scale characteristics and extreme void ratios. Critical state lines determined for extreme tailings gradations underestimate the range of critical state parameters that may be encountered in a tailings dam; in fact, mixtures with intermediate fines content exhibit the densest granular packing at critical state. The minimum void ratio emin captures the underlying role of particle shape and grain size distribution on granular packing and emerges as a valuable index property to inform sampling strategies for the assessment of spatial variability. Mineralogy does not significantly affect the intercept Γ100, but it does affect the slope λ. The friction coefficients M of tailings are similar to those of other nonplastic soils; while mineralogy does not have a significant effect on friction, more angular grains lead to higher friction coefficients.


2003 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 197-208
Author(s):  
Raoul Grönqvist ◽  
Simon Matz ◽  
Mikko Hirvonen

The variation in utilized and available friction over shoe-floor contact time was determined in the presence of high- and low-viscosity contaminants. The objectives were to improve the validity of slipperiness evaluations and to find better criteria for safe friction during heel strike. The utilized friction coefficients for six shoe types were determined during gait-trials with male participants. The available friction coefficients of these shoes were measured with a test rig simulating heel slipping. The experiments were performed on a stainless steel floor with concentrated glycerol ('oily' condition) and diluted glycerol (1:10 in water) as contaminants. It was hypothesized that any single friction measurement criterion would be an insufficient predictor for safe gait with no slip or with slip recovery, not leading to a fall. The results showed that both transitional friction (time-intervals from zero to about 250 ms of heel contact) and steady state kinetic friction (time-intervals from about 250 ms to 450 ms) properties in the shoe and floor interface play an important role in slipperiness measurement and slip/fall risk assessment. The role of static friction in the risk assessment remained unclear.


Carbon ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 178 ◽  
pp. 125-132
Author(s):  
Yasemin Keskin ◽  
Özhan Ünverdi ◽  
Dogan Erbahar ◽  
İsmet İnönü Kaya ◽  
Cem Çelebi

1960 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. G. Giles ◽  
Barbara E. Sabet

Abstract In this paper the authors have tried to give examples of some of the more important ways in which Dr. Tabor's paper on the importance of rubber hysteresis has contributed to a better understanding of the mechanism of friction between tire and road. It is evident that a number of the problems presented by past test results may now be explained in terms of rubber hysteresis losses, in particular, the mechanism of the dependence of skidding resistance on temperature, and the differences in performance between natural and synthetic tires. In relation to testing techniques it draws attention to the importance of temperature and to the need to standardize the hysteresis loss properties of test tires in addition to the hardness of tread-rubber. Finally, the most important of all, as Dr. Tabor suggests, his work opens up the possibility of improvements in tire characteristics, which could result in greatly increased friction coefficients and hence greater freedom from skidding under wet conditions. The limited full-scale tests the authors have been able to make seem fully to confirm this possibility.


Entropy ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (12) ◽  
pp. 933 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oscar Negrete ◽  
Patricio Vargas ◽  
Francisco Peña ◽  
Gonzalo Saravia ◽  
Eugenio Vogel

In this paper, we revisit the q-state clock model for small systems. We present results for the thermodynamics of the q-state clock model for values from q = 2 to q = 20 for small square lattices of L × L , with L ranging from L = 3 to L = 64 with free-boundary conditions. Energy, specific heat, entropy, and magnetization were measured. We found that the Berezinskii–Kosterlitz–Thouless (BKT)-like transition appears for q > 5, regardless of lattice size, while this transition at q = 5 is lost for L < 10; for q ≤ 4, the BKT transition is never present. We present the phase diagram in terms of q that shows the transition from the ferromagnetic (FM) to the paramagnetic (PM) phases at the critical temperature T 1 for small systems, and the transition changes such that it is from the FM to the BKT phase for larger systems, while a second phase transition between the BKT and the PM phases occurs at T 2. We also show that the magnetic phases are well characterized by the two-dimensional (2D) distribution of the magnetization values. We made use of this opportunity to carry out an information theory analysis of the time series obtained from Monte Carlo simulations. In particular, we calculated the phenomenological mutability and diversity functions. Diversity characterizes the phase transitions, but the phases are less detectable as q increases. Free boundary conditions were used to better mimic the reality of small systems (far from any thermodynamic limit). The role of size is discussed.


2011 ◽  
Vol 690 ◽  
pp. 499-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjy Marks ◽  
Pierre Rognon ◽  
Itai Einav

AbstractGranular materials segregate by size when sheared, which increases the destructive power in avalanches and causes demixing in industrial flows. Here we present a concise theory to describe this phenomenon for systems that for the first time include particles of arbitrary size. The evolution of the grainsize distribution during flow is described based on mass and momentum conservation. The theory is derived in a five-dimensional space, which besides position and time, includes a grainsize coordinate. By coupling the theory with a simple constitutive law we predict the kinematics of the flow, which depends on the grainsize dynamics. We show that the underpinning mechanism controlling segregation is a stress variation with grainsize. The theory, solved by a finite difference scheme, is found to predict the dynamics of segregation consistent with results obtained from discrete element simulations of polydisperse granular flow down inclined planes. Moreover, when applied to bimixtures, the general polydisperse theory reveals the role of grainsize contrast.


2015 ◽  
pp. 461-480 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Ángel Velázquez-Iturbide ◽  
Antonio Pérez-Carrasco ◽  
Ouafae Debdi

This chapter advocates for an approach to constructing educational tools that consists in designing small systems aimed at achieving clear educational goals and evaluating them in actual teaching situations. The authors addressed this approach with a number of small systems. In this chapter, they describe their experience in the development, use, and evaluation of two educational systems: SRec and GreedEx. The former is a highly interactive program animation system of recursion, and the latter is an interactive assistant aimed at learning the role of selection functions in greedy algorithms by means of experimentation. The evaluations allowed the authors to identify faults and weaknesses of the systems, and these results were used to enhance the systems. Moreover, their approach has yielded very high values with respect to effectiveness and student satisfaction.


Author(s):  
J. Ángel Velázquez-Iturbide ◽  
Antonio Pérez-Carrasco ◽  
Ouafae Debdi

This chapter advocates for an approach to constructing educational tools that consists in designing small systems aimed at achieving clear educational goals and evaluating them in actual teaching situations. The authors addressed this approach with a number of small systems. In this chapter, they describe their experience in the development, use, and evaluation of two educational systems: SRec and GreedEx. The former is a highly interactive program animation system of recursion, and the latter is an interactive assistant aimed at learning the role of selection functions in greedy algorithms by means of experimentation. The evaluations allowed the authors to identify faults and weaknesses of the systems, and these results were used to enhance the systems. Moreover, their approach has yielded very high values with respect to effectiveness and student satisfaction.


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