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Micromechanics of spatially uniform heterogeneous media: A critical review and emerging approaches
Authors:Marek-Jerzy Pindera  Hamed Khatam  Anthony S Drago  Yogesh Bansal
Affiliation:1. Civil Engineering Department, University of Virginia, 351 McCormick Road, Thornton Hall, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4742, USA;2. Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation, Stratford, CT 06615, USA;3. Interiors Responsibility Center, The Boeing Company, Seattle, WA 98124-2207, USA;1. School of Mechanical Engineering, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu 610031, PR China;2. Université Paris-Est, Laboratoire Modélisation et Simulation Multi Echelle, MSME UMR 8208 CNRS, 5 Bd Descartes, 77454 Marne-la-Vallée Cedex 2, France;1. Laboratoire d’Etude des Microstructures et de Mécanique des Matériaux, UMR CNRS 7239, Université de Lorraine, 57045 Metz, France;2. Laboratoire de Mécanique Biomécanique Polymères Structures, Ecole Nationale Ingénieurs de Metz, 57078 Metz, France;1. Centre des Matériaux, MINES-ParisTech, CNRS UMR 7633, BP 87, 91 003 Evry Cedex, France;2. Centre de Morphologie Mathématique, MINES-ParisTech, 35, rue St-Honoré, 77 305 Fontainebleau, France
Abstract:Outside of the classical microstructural detail-free estimates of effective moduli, micromechanical analyses of macroscopically uniform heterogeneous media may be grouped into two categories based on different geometric representations of material microstructure. Analysis of periodic materials is based on the repeating unit cell (RUC) concept and the associated periodic boundary conditions. This contrasts with analysis of statistically homogeneous materials based on the representative volume element (RVE) concept and the associated homogeneous boundary conditions. In this paper, using the above classification framework we provide a critical review of the various micromechanical approaches that had evolved along different paths, and outline recent emerging trends. We begin with the basic framework for the solution of micromechanics problems independent of microstructural representation, and then clarify the often confused RVE and RUC concepts. Next, we describe classical models, including the available RVE-based models, and critically examine their limitations. This is followed by discussion of models based on the concept of microstructural periodicity. In the final part, two recent unit cell-based models, which continue to evolve, are outlined. First, a homogenization technique called finite-volume direct averaging micromechanics theory is presented as a viable and easily implemented alternative to the mainstream finite-element based asymptotic homogenization of unit cells. The recent incorporation of parametric mapping into this approach has made it competitive with the finite-element method. Then, the latest work based on locally-exact solutions of unit cell problems is described. In this approach, the interior unit cell problem is solved exactly using the elasticity approach. The exterior problem is tackled with a new variational principle that successfully overcomes the non-separable nature of the overall unit cell problem.
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