Reference: S. Meille and E.J. Garboczi, Mod. Sim. Mater. Sci. 9, (5), 371-390, 2001.
(PDF
Version of Original paper)
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Linear Elastic Properties of 2-D and 3-D Models of Porous
Materials Made From Elongated Objects
S. Meille
INSA Lyon, GEMPPM Laboratory
20, Ave Albert Einstein
63621 Villeurbanne Cedex
and
Lafarge LCR
95, rue du Montmurier, BP 15
38 291 St Quentin Fallavier Cedex, FRANCE
E.J. Garboczi
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Building Materials Division
100 Bureau Drive Stop 8621
Gaithersburg, MD 20878-8621
Abstract
Porous materials are formed in nature and by man by many different processes.
The nature of the pore space, which is usually the space
left over
as the solid backbone forms, is often controlled by the morphology of the
solid backbone. In particular, sometimes the backbone is made from the
random deposition of elongated crystals, which makes analytical techniques
particularly difficult to apply. This paper discusses simple two and three
dimensional porous models whose solid backbone is formed by different random
arrangement of elongated solid objects (bars/crystals). We use a general
purpose elastic finite element routine designed for use on images of random
porous composite materials to study the linear elastic properties of these
models. Both Young's modulus and Poisson's ratio depend on the porosity and
the morphology of the pore space, as well as on the properties of the
individual solid phases. The models are random digital image models, so that
the effects of statistical fluctuation, finite size effect, and digital
resolution error must be carefully quantified. It is shown how to properly
average the numerical results over random crystal orientation. Relations
between two and three dimensions are also explored, as most microstructural
information comes from two dimensional images, while most real materials and
experiments are three dimensional.
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