Unified Micromechanics Theory of Composites
Valeriy A. Buryachenko

TL;DR
This paper introduces a comprehensive micromechanics framework that unifies the analysis of diverse composite materials, incorporating advanced mathematical, computational, and machine learning techniques to model their complex behaviors.
Contribution
It develops a universal, exact integral equation approach and a novel RVE concept, enabling accurate, scalable modeling of composites with varied structures and properties, including nonlocal and nonlinear effects.
Findings
Unified micromechanics framework applicable to all composite types
Introduction of a new RVE concept eliminating size and boundary effects
Integration with machine learning for surrogate nonlocal operators
Abstract
We consider the matrix composite materials (CM) of either random (statistically homogeneous or inhomogeneous), periodic, or deterministic (neither random nor periodic) structures. CMs exhibit linear or nonlinear behavior, coupled or uncoupled multi-physical phenomena, locally elastic, weakly nonlocal (strain gradient and stress gradient), or strongly nonlocal (strain-type and displacement-type, peridynamics) phase properties. A modified Computational Analytical Micromechanics (CAM) approach introduces an exact Additive General Integral Equation (AGIE) for CMs of any structure and phase properties mentioned above. The unified iteration solution of static AGIEs is adapted to the body force with compact support serving as a fundamentally new universal training parameter. The approach also establishes a critical threshold for filtering out unsuitable sub-datasets of effective parameters…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComposite Material Mechanics · Mechanical Behavior of Composites · Material Properties and Applications
