.
The pore phase is macroscopically connected above porosities of
0.03 and the solid phase remains connected for values of
below
0.70
[14]. Above
= 0.7, the solid phase is composed of isolated
solid particles. So between
= 0.03 and
= 0.70,
the
overlapping solid sphere model is bi-continuous.
In ceramics the porosity is generally less then 0.40, in this bi-continuous
regime.
We therefore consider the elastic properties for
0.1
0.50, where the solid Poisson's ratio,
s
, varied over the range 0.1 
s
0.4.
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To generate the microstructure we chose solid spheres of
radius r=1 µm. Note that the elastic properties are length scale
invariant so the results apply to spheres of any radius for which the
continuum assumption holds. A preliminary study showed that finite size
errors were acceptably small for cubic samples with edge length T=12
µm. To study the discretization errors we generated one
realization of the model with porosity
= 0.5 at M = 48
128.
The elastic properties depend quite strongly on resolution.
We found that the variation of Young's modulus with M could be
described by the relation [22]
where E0 can be identified as
the continuum value (corresponding to infinitely large M). The same is
true for Poisson's ratio. Even at M=128 the finite element
code overestimates the 'exact' result for the Young's modulus by 30 %.
Therefore, for the overlapping sphere model it is necessary to measure
the elastic moduli at three different values of M and extrapolate the
results to M
.
We chose Ns=5 samples at each resolution and
porosity, except at
= 0.5 where large statistical variations implied a
larger number of samples was necessary (Ns=10).
Thus 30 different realizations of the models were considered, each at 3
different discretizations, for a total of 90 models.
The statistical variation in Young's modulus and Poisson's ratio
for the case
s = 0.2 are shown in Table 1.
The error bars shown in the table are equal to twice the standard error
(S.E.=
with
the standard deviation). Therefore there is a 95% chance that the
"true" result lies between the indicated error bars. The results are
accurate to within 20% at
= 0.5; the error decreasing with porosity
to less than 10% for
0.30. The expected
Gaussian distribution of the measured averages implies that the results are
actually more accurate than this. For example, the anticipated relative
errors are halved if a 68% likelihood threshold is used (i.e., ± one
standard error).
| Overlapping solid spheres | Overlapping spherical pores | Overlapping ellipsoidal pores | ||||
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E/Es | ![]() |
E/Es | ![]() |
E/Es | ![]() |
| 0.1 | 0.71 ± 1% | 0.19 ± 1% | 0.80 ± 1% | 0.20 ± 1% | 0.73 ± 2% | 0.19 ± 3% |
| 0.2 | 0.47 ± 2% | 0.18 ± 4% | 0.62 ± 2% | 0.20 ± 2% | 0.52 ± 3% | 0.18 ± 4% |
| 0.3 | 0.25 ± 6% | 0.17 ± 9% | 0.46 ± 3% | 0.21 ± 3% | 0.34 ± 4% | 0.18 ± 6% |
| 0.4 | 0.12 ± 13% | 0.15 ± 25% | 0.33 ± 4% | 0.21 ± 4% | 0.20 ± 3% | 0.18 ± 4% |
| 0.5 | 0.039 ± 22% | 0.15 ± 21% | 0.21 ± 8% | 0.22 ± 9% | 0.11 ± 4% | 0.18 ± 6% |
In addition to the above results we also computed the elastic
moduli of the 90 model microstructures at solid Poisson's ratios
s
= 0.1, 0.3 and 0.4. The statistical variation was
not significantly different from the case
s = 0.2. Combined with the data
for
s = 0.2 this covers most commonly occuring solids. The
scaled Young's modulus for each value of
is plotted against porosity in
Fig. 2. Remarkably, the scaled Young's
modulus of the porous material appears to be practically independent of
s
. This result has been proven to be exact in 2-D [23,24] and appears to hold to a very good
approximation in 3-D. We found that the Young's modulus data are well
described by an equation of the form
with n=2.23 and
0 = 0.652 and
0
0.5. Note that n and
0 are empirical
correlation parameters and should not be interpreted as the percolation
exponent and threshold, respectively. Percolation concepts are generally
valid closer to the threshold
c
0.7 (for this model) and a higher value of
n is expected. The computational cost of accurately measuring the
elastic properties increases greatly as the percolation threshold is
approached.
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The Poisson's ratio of the porous material is shown in
Fig. 3 as a function of
and
s, and appears
to be a flow diagram [23],
where the Poisson's ratio asymptotically approaches a fixed point,
independently of the value of the solid Poisson's ratio. This flow diagram
has been analytically proven to hold in 2-D,
when a percolation threshold exists at which the Young's modulus goes to
zero [23,24].
This flow diagram also appears to be valid in 3-D as well, within numerical
uncertainty. The Poisson's ratio data shown in
Fig. 3
can be roughly described by the simple linear relation,
with two fitting parameters
0 = 0.140 and
0 = 0.472. A more accurate fit is obtained with the
three parameter relation,
with
0 = 0.140,
0 =
0.500 and m=1.22.
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