Creep of granular materials

AbstractThis paper examines the creep of brittle granular materials subjected to one-dimensional compression. One-dimensional creep tests were performed on aggregates of brittle pasta and compared with the behaviour of sand at much higher stress levels. It was found that for both materials, creep strain is proportional to the logarithm of time. One possible mechanism for creep is particle crushing. However, it is usually difficult to measure changes in the particle size distribution during creep because the fines produced are so small, and the mass of fines is too small to measure accurately unless creep is permitted for a very long time. However, for pasta, the particle fragments produced are large, and it is found that particle crushing does occur during creep for 24 hours. This is consistent with the proposition that the behaviour of all brittle granular materials is essentially the same. A micro mechanical argument is then summarised which predicts that creep strain should be proportional to log time.