The Influence of the Degree of Heterogeneity on the Elastic Properties of Random Sphere Packings
Iwan Schenker, Frank T. Filser, Markus H\"utter, Ludwig J. Gauckler

TL;DR
This study uses computational models to analyze how the heterogeneity of spherical particle packings influences their elastic properties, revealing a power-law relationship and a potential phase transition.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic computational approach to link heterogeneity levels with elastic properties, highlighting a universal relation independent of microstructure generation methods.
Findings
Elastic properties depend on heterogeneity degree via a power law.
The relation is consistent across different microstructure generation algorithms.
Evidence suggests a phase transition at a critical heterogeneity level.
Abstract
The macroscopic mechanical properties of colloidal particle gels strongly depend on the local arrangement of the powder particles. Experiments have shown that more heterogeneous microstructures exhibit up to one order of magnitude higher elastic properties than their more homogeneous counterparts at equal volume fraction. In this paper, packings of spherical particles are used as model structures to computationally investigate the elastic properties of coagulated particle gels as a function of their degree of heterogeneity. The discrete element model comprises a linear elastic contact law, particle bonding and damping. The simulation parameters were calibrated using a homogeneous and a heterogeneous microstructure originating from earlier Brownian dynamics simulations. A systematic study of the elastic properties as a function of the degree of heterogeneity was performed using two sets…
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