Boundary element simulation of void formation in fibrous reinforcements based on the Stokes–Darcy formulation

The Boundary Element Method (BEM) is applied for the solution of the problem of void formation in fibrous reinforcements used in composite materials. Stokes and Darcy formulations for the channel and porous medium are considered, including three main differences with most of the previous models repo...

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Main Authors: Patiño Arcila, Iván David, Power, Henry, Nieto Londoño, César, Flórez Escobar, Whady Felipe
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2016
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44173/
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author Patiño Arcila, Iván David
Power, Henry
Nieto Londoño, César
Flórez Escobar, Whady Felipe
author_facet Patiño Arcila, Iván David
Power, Henry
Nieto Londoño, César
Flórez Escobar, Whady Felipe
author_sort Patiño Arcila, Iván David
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The Boundary Element Method (BEM) is applied for the solution of the problem of void formation in fibrous reinforcements used in composite materials. Stokes and Darcy formulations for the channel and porous medium are considered, including three main differences with most of the previous models reported in the literature that deal with this type of problem: the consideration of the general form of the Beavers–Joseph slip condition instead of the Saffman simplification, the calculation of the flow direction-dependent capillary pressure in the porous medium without experimental factors and the consideration of the surface traction effects in the channel fluid front. An analytical solution of a simple problem is presented to assess the accuracy and convergence of the BEM solution, obtaining good agreement between the results. In order to evaluate the main differences between the Stokes–Darcy formulation and a dual-scale permeability Darcy approach, a problem of constant pressure filling is considered, showing significant differences in the evolution of the flow field as: filling times, shape of the moving fluid front and size and shape of the formed voids. Finally, several simulations at constant flow rate are carried out to analyze the influence of the capillary number, tow porosity, width of transverse tow, fluid penetrability and RUC porosity on the size, shape and location of the void. In general, the void size and shape are influenced by the considered parameters, but the void location is not.
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spelling nottingham-441732020-05-04T17:48:47Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44173/ Boundary element simulation of void formation in fibrous reinforcements based on the Stokes–Darcy formulation Patiño Arcila, Iván David Power, Henry Nieto Londoño, César Flórez Escobar, Whady Felipe The Boundary Element Method (BEM) is applied for the solution of the problem of void formation in fibrous reinforcements used in composite materials. Stokes and Darcy formulations for the channel and porous medium are considered, including three main differences with most of the previous models reported in the literature that deal with this type of problem: the consideration of the general form of the Beavers–Joseph slip condition instead of the Saffman simplification, the calculation of the flow direction-dependent capillary pressure in the porous medium without experimental factors and the consideration of the surface traction effects in the channel fluid front. An analytical solution of a simple problem is presented to assess the accuracy and convergence of the BEM solution, obtaining good agreement between the results. In order to evaluate the main differences between the Stokes–Darcy formulation and a dual-scale permeability Darcy approach, a problem of constant pressure filling is considered, showing significant differences in the evolution of the flow field as: filling times, shape of the moving fluid front and size and shape of the formed voids. Finally, several simulations at constant flow rate are carried out to analyze the influence of the capillary number, tow porosity, width of transverse tow, fluid penetrability and RUC porosity on the size, shape and location of the void. In general, the void size and shape are influenced by the considered parameters, but the void location is not. Elsevier 2016-06-01 Article PeerReviewed Patiño Arcila, Iván David, Power, Henry, Nieto Londoño, César and Flórez Escobar, Whady Felipe (2016) Boundary element simulation of void formation in fibrous reinforcements based on the Stokes–Darcy formulation. Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 304 . pp. 265-293. ISSN 1879-2138 Boundary Element Method; Stokes–Darcy; Fibrous reinforcements; Void formation http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0045782516300329?via%3Dihub doi:10.1016/j.cma.2016.02.010 doi:10.1016/j.cma.2016.02.010
spellingShingle Boundary Element Method; Stokes–Darcy; Fibrous reinforcements; Void formation
Patiño Arcila, Iván David
Power, Henry
Nieto Londoño, César
Flórez Escobar, Whady Felipe
Boundary element simulation of void formation in fibrous reinforcements based on the Stokes–Darcy formulation
title Boundary element simulation of void formation in fibrous reinforcements based on the Stokes–Darcy formulation
title_full Boundary element simulation of void formation in fibrous reinforcements based on the Stokes–Darcy formulation
title_fullStr Boundary element simulation of void formation in fibrous reinforcements based on the Stokes–Darcy formulation
title_full_unstemmed Boundary element simulation of void formation in fibrous reinforcements based on the Stokes–Darcy formulation
title_short Boundary element simulation of void formation in fibrous reinforcements based on the Stokes–Darcy formulation
title_sort boundary element simulation of void formation in fibrous reinforcements based on the stokes–darcy formulation
topic Boundary Element Method; Stokes–Darcy; Fibrous reinforcements; Void formation
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44173/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44173/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44173/