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Momentum transfer during the impact of granular matter with inclined sliding surfaces

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Kyner, A 
Deshpande, V 
Wadley, HNG 

Abstract

© 2017 Elsevier Ltd Increasing the inclination of a rigid surface that is impacted by a collimated granular flow reduces the fraction of granular matter momentum transferred to the surface. Recent studies have shown that the momentum reduction depends upon a frictional interaction between the granular flow and the impacted surface. High coefficient of friction surfaces suffer significantly more momentum transfer than predicted by resolution of the incident momentum onto the inclined plane. This discovery has raised the possibility that inclined surfaces with very low friction coefficients might reduce the impulsive transferred by the impact of high velocity granular matter. Here the use of a lubricated sliding plate is investigated as a means for reducing interfacial friction and impulse transfer to an inclined surface. The study uses a combination of experimental testing and particle-based simulations to investigate impulse transfer to rigid aluminum surfaces inclined either perpendicular or at 53° to synthetic sand that was impulsively accelerated to a velocity of 350–500 m/s. The study shows that impact of this sand with lubricated plates attached to an inclined surface rapidly accelerates them to a velocity of about 55–70 m/s, and reduces the impulse transferred to the inclined surface below. The reduction of impulse by this approach is comparable to that achieved by changing the inclination of the surface.

Description

Keywords

granular matter, fluid structure interaction, discrete particle-based simulation

Journal Title

Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0022-5096

Volume Title

106

Publisher

Elsevier
Sponsorship
This research was funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) under grant number W91CRB-11-1-0005 (Program manager, Dr. J. Goldwasser).