4.6 Article

Foam structure: From soap froth to solid foams

Journal

MRS BULLETIN
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 275-278

Publisher

MATERIALS RESEARCH SOCIETY
DOI: 10.1557/mrs2003.80

Keywords

cellular solids; computer simulations; foams; structure-property relationships

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The properties of solid foams depend on their structure, which usually evolves, in the fluid state as gas bubbles expand to form polyhedral cells. The characteristic,feature of foam structure-randomly packed cells of different sizes and shapes-is examined in this article by considering soap froth. This material can be modeled as a network of minimal surfaces that divide space into polyhedral cells. The cell-level geometry of, random soap froth is calculated with Brakke's Surface Evolver software. The distribution of cell volumes ranges from monodisperse to highly polydisperse. Topological and geometric properties, such as surface area and edge length, of the entire foam and individual cells, are discussed. The shape of struts in solid foams is related to-Plateau borders in liquid foams and calculated for different volume fractions of material. The, models of soap froth are used as templates to produce finite element models of open-cell foams. Three-dimensional images of open-cell foams obtained with x-ray microtomography allow virtual reconstruction of skeletal structures that compare well with the Surface Evolver simulations of soap-froth geometry.

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