Sergejs Tarasovs

2papers

2 Papers

49.0CEMay 27
Modelling the effect of fiber distribution on the transverse mechanical characteristics of unidirectionally reinforced continuous-fiber composite

Sergejs Tarasovs, Janis Modniks, Andrea Bercini Martins et al.

This study investigates the influence of fiber spatial distribution on the transverse mechanical properties of unidirectionally reinforced continuous-fiber composites. A Swelling & Random Migration algorithm was employed to generate representative volume elements with controlled fiber arrangements, ranging from clustered to equilibrium configurations. Finite element homogenization with periodic boundary conditions was used to estimate effective elastic properties. To characterize fiber randomness and assess statistical equivalence with experimental microstructures, several descriptors are employed, including nearest neighbor distance, Ripley's K-function, pair distribution function, and local fiber volume fraction. Results reveal that, at constant fiber volume fraction, clustered fiber distributions yield significantly higher transverse stiffness but lower transverse tensile strength compared to the equilibrium distributions. For glass/epoxy composites, transverse stiffness varies by up to 20% depending on the degree of fiber clustering. A single scalar descriptor, the mean nearest neighbor distance, was shown to efficiently characterize sufficiently random fiber distributions: effective stiffness decreases, whereas transverse tensile strength increases linearly with mean nearest neighbor distance. The findings highlight the critical role of microstructural characteristics in tailoring composite performance and provide a robust framework for predictive modeling of fiber reinforced materials.

28.3CEMay 18
Efficient generation of large-scale non-equilibrium distributions of particles

Sergejs Tarasovs

This work presents an efficient algorithm for generating statistically representative microstructures of particulate composites in periodic representative volume elements. The Swelling and Random Migration (SRM) algorithm combines collective particle rearrangements with an adaptive cell-based neighbor-search scheme, enabling near-linear computational scaling for low to intermediate volume fractions and allowing simulations with up to $10^7$ particles in two and three dimensions. SRM offers great flexibility, allowing the controlled generation of both equilibrium-like and strongly non-equilibrium particle arrangements. The method is readily extendable to non-spherical inclusions; this capability is demonstrated by modeling thin circular platelets and generating qualitatively distinct platelet microstructures, including highly interconnected "house-of-cards" networks and metastable quasi-nematic domains. The results highlight the importance of microstructural arrangement in structure-property relationships and establish SRM as a powerful tool for generating realistic, diverse, and computationally accessible particle configurations for composite material modeling.