Modified inelastic bouncing ball model for describing the dynamics of granular materials in a vibrated container

Issue Date

1-2015

Abstract

We show that at the onset of convection, the acceleration of a confined granular material is not necessarily equal to that of its vibrated container. Convection happens when the material is able to counter the downward gravitational pull and accelerates at a rate that is equal to the gravitational acceleration g. We modify the Inelastic Bouncing Ball Model and incorporate the transmissibility parameter Tr which measures the efficiency that the external force driving the container is transmitted to the material itself. For a specified Tr value, the material is represented by an inelastic bouncing ball with a time-of-flight T(Γ;Tr) where Γ=A0ω2/g, is the dimensionless container acceleration, and A0 and ω are the driving amplitude and angular frequency, respectively. For a given Γ-range, the T(Γ;Tr) curve provides the bifurcation diagram of the perturbed material and a family of bifurcation diagrams is generated for a set of Tr values. We illustrate that Tr is useful in rationalizing experimental results produced by confined granular materials that is subjected to a range of applied force magnitudes. For the same physical set-up, the force transmission efficiency from the container to the grains may not remain constant as the force strength is varied. The efficiency is also affected by the presence or absence of air in the vibrated container.

Source or Periodical Title

Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena

ISSN

0167-2789

Volume

291

Page

17-20

Document Type

Article

Physical Description

illustrations, graphs, figures

Language

English

Subject

Bifurcations, Bouncing, Convection, Granular flow, Non-linear dynamics

Identifier

doi:10.1016/j.physd.2014.10.003.

Digital Copy

yes

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