4.5 Article

Effective simulation of flexible lateral boundaries in two- and three-dimensional DEM simulations

Journal

PARTICUOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages 483-500

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.partic.2008.07.018

Keywords

Triaxial testing; Discrete element simulation; Boundary conditions

Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
  2. ARUP

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Discrete element method (DEN) models to simulate laboratory element tests play all important role in advancing our understanding of the mechanics of granular material response, including, bonded or cemented, particulate materials. Comparisons of the macro-scale response observed in a real physical test and a virtual DEM-simulated test can calibrate or validate DEM models. The detailed, particle scale information provided in the DEM simulation can then be used to develop our understanding of the material behaviour. It is important to accurately model the physical test boundary conditions in these DEM simulations. This paper specifically considers triaxial tests as these tests are commonly used in soil mechanics. In a triaxial test, the test specimen of granular material is enclosed within a flexible latex membrane that allows the material to deform freely during testing, while maintaining a specified stress condition. Triaxial tests can only be realistically simulated in 3D DEM codes, however analogue. 2D, biaxial DEM simulations are also often considered as it is easier to visualize particle interactions in two dimensions. This paper describes algorithms to simulate the lateral boundary conditions imposed by the latex membrane used in physical triaxial tests in both 2D and 3D DEM simulations. The importance of carefully considering the lateral boundary conditions in DEM simulations is illustrated by considering a 2D biaxial test on a specimen of frictional unbonded disks and a 3D triaxial test on a bonded (cemented) specimen of spheres. The. comparisons indicate that the lateral boundary conditions have a more significant influence on the local, particle-scale response in comparison with the overall macro-scale observations. (c) 2008 Chinese Society of Particuology and Institute of Process Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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