4.4 Article

Anisotropic imperfect interface in elastic particulate composite with initial stress

Journal

MATHEMATICS AND MECHANICS OF SOLIDS
Volume 27, Issue 5, Pages 872-895

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/10812865211046650

Keywords

Spherical particle composite; anisotropic interphase; imperfect interface; thermal stress; multipole expansion; nanomechanics

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [NSF CMMI-2112894]

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The study develops an anisotropic interface model in an elastic particulate composite with initial stress, serving as a first-order approximation of the transversely isotropic interphase between an isotropic matrix and spherical particles. The model, with eight independent parameters, ensures applicability at various length scales and flexibility in modeling interfaces characterized by initial stress and discontinuity of displacement and stress fields. The research discusses the relevance of this model to material interface theory and its applicability in nanomechanics.
The model of an anisotropic interface in an elastic particulate composite with initial stress is developed as the first-order approximation of a transversely isotropic interphase between an isotropic matrix and spherical particles. The model involves eight independent parameters with a clear physical meaning and conventional dimensionality. This ensures its applicability at various length scales and flexibility in modeling the interfaces, characterized by the initial stress and discontinuity of the displacement and stress fields. The relevance of this model to the theory of material interfaces and its applicability in nanomechanics is discussed. The proposed imperfect interface model is incorporated in the unit cell model of a spherical particle composite with thermal stress owing to uniform temperature change. The rigorous solution to the model boundary value problem is obtained using the multipole expansion method. The reported accurate numerical data confirm the correctness of the developed theory, provide an estimate of its accuracy and applicability limits in the multiparticle environment, and reveal significant effects of the interphase or interface anisotropy and initial stress on the local fields and overall thermoelastic properties of the composite.

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