Length scales and self-organization in dense suspension flows

Abstract

Dense non-Brownian suspension flows of hard particles display mystifying properties: as the jamming threshold is approached, the viscosity diverges, as well as a length scale that can be identified from velocity correlations. To unravel the microscopic mechanism governing dissipation and its connection to the observed long-range correlations, we develop an analogy between suspension flows and the rigidity transition occurring when floppy networks are pulled -- a transition believed to be associated to the stress-stiffening of certain gels. After deriving the critical properties near the rigidity transition, we show numerically that suspensions flows lie close to it. We find that this proximity causes a decoupling between viscosity and the correlation length of velocities , which scales as the length lc characterizing the response of the velocity in flow to a local perturbation, previously predicted to follow lc 1/zc-z p0.18 where p is the dimensionless particle pressure, z the coordination of the contact network made by the particles and zc is twice the spatial dimension. We confirm these predictions numerically, predict the existence of a larger length scale lr 1/p with mild effects on velocity correlation and the existence of a vanishing strain δ γ 1/p that characterizes de-correlation in flow.

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