[Slaam] Reminder: SLAAM Seminar Monday March 18: Carmen Lee (NCSU)

SLAAM Distribution List slaam at lists.ucmerced.edu
Mon Mar 18 08:25:13 PDT 2024


Dear all,
Please join today's SLAAM seminar beginning in  ~30 minutes.
Please note the different zoom link today:

https://umich.zoom.us/j/93341812326?pwd=TVk1ZFl3WGtSWHJmMTM3dG9BVk1jQT09


________________________________
From: Slaam <slaam-bounces at lists.ucmerced.edu> on behalf of SLAAM Distribution List <slaam at lists.ucmerced.edu>
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2024 10:52 AM
To: slaam <slaam at lists.ucmerced.edu>
Subject: [Slaam] Reminder: SLAAM Seminar Monday March 18: Carmen Lee (NCSU)

Dear enthusiasts of the SLAAM seminar series,

This is a gentle reminder that our next SLAAM seminar will be given by Dr. Carmen Lee (North Carolina State University) on Monday, March 18th, at 9am Pacific/11am Central/12 noon Eastern time (US), with the title:

Relating the microscale to the macroscale in granular materials

Please join at the link below to attend:


https://umich.zoom.us/j/93341812326?pwd=TVk1ZFl3WGtSWHJmMTM3dG9BVk1jQT09


Meeting ID: 933 4181 2326

Passcode: 289182

As usual, there will be a 15 min informal Q&A at the end of the hour. Graduate students will have an opportunity to interact with the speaker in an informal setting during the "Meet the speaker" timeslot just after the talk. Please join if the time works for you.


Please see more info in the flyer here<https://physics.ucmerced.edu/sites/physics.ucmerced.edu/files/page/documents/carmen_lee_slaam.pdf> and in the text below:

Granular materials, like soils and powders, play crucial roles in diverse applications from construction to agriculture to pharmaceuticals. Unlike continuous media, where strength can be determined by bulk material properties, the strength of granular materials is highly dependent on grain connectivity (fabric), force transmission, and frictional mobilization at the particle scale. Furthermore, these bulk properties are strongly dependent on the geometry and history of loading. It is well established that anisotropy in fabric and force transmission through a granular packing directly relates to the bulk scale strength of the packing. Although the relationship between particle-scale anisotropy and macroscale properties has been verified through simulated conditions, we have observed that it is valid for a broad variety of loading histories and geometries in experimental granular packings. In this talk, I will present experiments conducted on a photoelastic granular system -- allowing us to measure individual interparticle contact forces -- subject to compressive and shear loading. By tracking both particle positions and interparticle contact force vectors, we map the anisotropy of the fabric and forces to the macroscale stress and strain. We find excellent agreement between the anisotropic particle-scale measures and the macroscale responses in experiments, independent of the loading geometry, showing that with knowledge of the forces and positions of the particles, one can predict the strength of the packing.


Speaker Bio:
Carmen Lee is an experimental physicist investigating fluid dynamics and granular physics, with an interest in exploring fundamental principles and interdisciplinary connections. Her research delves into understanding the behaviour of fluids and granular materials, drawing parallels between physical phenomena and natural systems. Carmen is currently a postdoctoral researcher at North Carolina State University in the Department of Physics. She completed her Ph.D. in Physics at McMaster University, focusing on the driven flow of droplets and bubbles.


See you there!


Best regards,

Suraj Shankar

on behalf of the SLAAM organizing team
(Alexandra Tayar, Suraj Shankar, Daniel Beller, Kinjal Dasbiswas)

To join the SLAAM mailing list, please sign up here<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScTyzEuuE7TfrrapgP4tzN_oPSqbBhURUxa9-zc8USnY1IPzA/viewform>. If you’re a postdoc interested in giving a SLAAM talk, we invite you to register your interest on that webform.

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Regards,
Suraj Shankar (he/him/his)
Assistant Professor of Physics
University of Michigan
2241 Homer A. Neal Laboratory,
LSA Physics, Ann Arbor, MI 48109
https://surajshankar.com/

If I send emails outside of standard working hours, I may be working flexibly or in a different time zone. I do not expect a response outside of your working hours.

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