Title of article
Micromechanics of crystal interfaces in polycrystalline solid phases of porous media: fundamentals and application to strength of hydroxyapatite biomaterials
Author/Authors
Andreas Fritsch، نويسنده , , Luc Dormieux ، نويسنده , , Christian Hellmich، نويسنده , , Julien Sanahuja، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
14
From page
8824
To page
8837
Abstract
Interfaces are often believed to play a role in
the mechanical behavior of mineralized biological and
biomimetic materials. This motivates the micromechanical
description of the elasticity and brittle failure of interfaces
between crystals in a (dense) polycrystal, which serves as
the skeleton of a porous material defined one observation
scale above. Equilibrium and compatibility conditions,
together with a suitable matrix-inclusion problem with a
compliant interface, yield the homogenized elastic properties
of the polycrystal, and of the porous material with
polycrystalline solid phase. Incompressibility of single
crystals guarantees finite shear stiffness of the polycrystal,
even for vanishing interface stiffness, while increasing the
latter generally leads to an increase of polycrystal shear
stiffness. Corresponding elastic energy expressions give
access to effective stresses representing the stress heterogeneities
in the microstructures, which induce brittle failure.
Thereby, Coulomb-type brittle failure of the crystalline
interfaces implies Drucker–Prager-type (brittle, elastic
limit-type) failure properties at the scale of the polycrystal.
At the even higher scale of the porous material, high
interfacial rigidities or low interfacial friction angles may
result in closed elastic domains, indicating material failure
even under hydrostatic pressure. This micromechanics
model can satisfactorily reproduce the experimental
strength data of different (brittle) hydroxyapatite biomaterials,
across largely variable porosities. Thereby, the
brittle failure criteria can be well approximated by micromechanically
derived criteria referring to ductile solid
matrices, both criteria being even identical if the solid
matrix is incompressible
Journal title
Journal of Materials Science
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Journal of Materials Science
Record number
833623
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