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Compacted unbound granular materials are extensively used as sub-layer in pavement design. Most pavement design guides assume that they are responsible for the degradation and deformation of the roads and railways that they support. Biaxial tests are usually employed to investigate the elasto-plastic response of these materials to cyclic loading. A particularly interesting question is whether a limit load exists, below which the excitations shake down, in the sense that the material does not accumulate further deformations. We have carried out a detailed study of the elasto-plastic behavior of a simple model of unbound granular matter submitted to cyclic loading. The dissipated energy through out the simulation has been used for the characterization of the different regimes of responses.
The existence of a very special ratcheting regime has recently been reported in a granular packing subjected to cyclic loading cite{alonso04}. In this state, the system accumulates a small permanent deformation after each cycle. After a short transie
We report on experiments to measure the temporal and spatial evolution of packing arrangements of anisotropic, cylindrical granular material, using high-resolution capacitive monitoring. In these experiments, the particle configurations start from an
We investigate the bulldozing motion of a granular sandpile driven forwards by a vertical plate. The problem is set up in the laboratory by emplacing the pile on a table rotating underneath a stationary plate; the continual circulation of the bulldoz
We study experimentally the fracture mechanisms of a model cohesive granular medium consisting of glass beads held together by solidified polymer bridges. The elastic response of this material can be controlled by changing the cross-linking of the po
We test the elasticity of granular aggregates using increments of shear and volume strain in a numerical simulation. We find that the increment in volume strain is almost reversible, but the increment in shear strain is not. The strength of this irre