Abstract
Aminimal model for studying the mechanical properties of amorphous solids is a disordered network of point masses connected by unbreakable springs.At a critical value of itsmean connectivity, such a network becomes fragile: it undergoes a rigidity transition signaled by a vanishing shear modulus and transverse sound speed.We investigate analytically and numerically the linear and nonlinear visco-elastic response of these fragile solids by probing how shear fronts propagate through them. Our approach, which we tentatively label shear front rheology, provides an alternative route to standard oscillatory rheology. In the linear regime, we observe at late times a diffusive broadening of the fronts controlled by an effective shear viscosity that diverges at the critical point. No matter how small the microscopic coefficient of dissipation, strongly disordered networks behave as if they were overdamped because energy is irreversibly leaked into diverging nonaffine fluctuations. Close to the transition, the regime of linear response becomes vanishingly small: the tiniest shear strains generate strongly nonlinear shear shock waves qualitatively different from their compressional counterparts in granular media. The inherent nonlinearities trigger an energy cascade from low to high frequency components that keep the network away from attaining the quasistatic limit. This mechanism, reminiscent of acoustic turbulence, causes a superdiffusive broadening of the shock width.
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Ulrich, S., Upadhyaya, N., Van Opheusden, B., & Vitelli, V. (2013). Shear shocks in fragile networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(52), 20929–20934. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1314468110
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