Xa. Zhong et Wg. Knauss, Effects of particle interaction and size variation on damage evolution in filled elastomers, MECH COMPOS, 7(1), 2000, pp. 35-53
A micromechanical analysis of damage evolution (interfacial debonding) in p
article-filled elastomers addresses the effect of the interactions between
particles and of variation in filler size. The composite is treated as an a
ssembly of two constituents in a finite-element model. It is shown that the
interaction between particles controls the damage evolution: (1) For high
volume fraction, a relatively small change:in particle size has a surprisin
gly large effect on the local material response; (2) for large differences
in particle sizes (e.g., bimodal distribution), damage occurs at interfaces
between large particles and matrix, with limited damage occurring at small
particles. While these effects of particle interaction and size variation
are smoothed out in a large ensemble of particles, it is foreseeable that t
hey are an important factor in a failure process such as macroscopic crack
propagation, which spans scales considerably larger than the maximum partic
le size. Specifically, one thus expects that in the vicinity of a macroscop
ic crack the large particles become sites for small cracks which coalesce i
nto larger ones and join up with the macro crack, while small particles ope
rate primarily so as to locally stiffen the matrix without incurring signif
icant damage in their vicinity.