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Simulation and quantitative assessment of homogeneous and inhomogeneous particle distributions in particulate metal matrix composites

Simulation and quantitative assessment of homogeneous and inhomogeneous particle distributions in particulate metal matrix composites
Simulation and quantitative assessment of homogeneous and inhomogeneous particle distributions in particulate metal matrix composites
Reinforcement distributions play an important role in various aspects of the processing and final mechanical behaviour of particulate metal matrix composites (PMMCs). Methods for quantifying spatial distribution in such materials are, however, poorly developed, particularly in relation to the range of particle size, shape and orientation that may be present in any one system. The present work investigates via computer simulations the influences of particle morphology, homogeneity and inhomogeneity on spatial distribution measurements obtained by finite-body tessellation. Distribution inhomogeneity was simulated both by the segregation of particles away from specified regions within a microstructure and by generating point density peaks at random locations within a microstructure. Both isotropic and anisotropic inhomogeneous distributions were considered to simulate distribution patterns in PMMCs before and after mechanical working. It was found that the coefficient of variation of the mean near-neighbour distance (COV(dmean)), derived from particle interfaces using finite-body tessellation, was essentially independent of particle shape, size distribution, orientation and area fraction in homogeneous (random) distributions, but showed great sensitivity to inhomogeneity. Increased values of COV(dmean) were seen for both forms of inhomogeneous distributions considered here, with little influence of particle morphology. The COV(dmean) was also seen to be sensitive to anisotropic clustering, the presence of which was identified via nearest-neighbour angles and cell orientations. Although generally formulated for PMMCs, the present results may be generalized to other systems containing low aspect ratio finite bodies of low to moderate area fraction.
coefficient of variation, finite-body tessellation, homogeneity, image analysis, metal matrix composite, mean near-neighbour distance, particle distribution, tessellation
0022-2720
189-200
Yang, N.
5f9a94b8-5e8a-4dbe-9da2-f6d3359b0a0f
Boselli, J.
5045ca47-151c-4317-97c9-ffb0915343d5
Sinclair, I.
6005f6c1-f478-434e-a52d-d310c18ade0d
Yang, N.
5f9a94b8-5e8a-4dbe-9da2-f6d3359b0a0f
Boselli, J.
5045ca47-151c-4317-97c9-ffb0915343d5
Sinclair, I.
6005f6c1-f478-434e-a52d-d310c18ade0d

Yang, N., Boselli, J. and Sinclair, I. (2001) Simulation and quantitative assessment of homogeneous and inhomogeneous particle distributions in particulate metal matrix composites. Journal of Microscopy, 201 (2), 189-200. (doi:10.1046/j.1365-2818.2001.00766.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Reinforcement distributions play an important role in various aspects of the processing and final mechanical behaviour of particulate metal matrix composites (PMMCs). Methods for quantifying spatial distribution in such materials are, however, poorly developed, particularly in relation to the range of particle size, shape and orientation that may be present in any one system. The present work investigates via computer simulations the influences of particle morphology, homogeneity and inhomogeneity on spatial distribution measurements obtained by finite-body tessellation. Distribution inhomogeneity was simulated both by the segregation of particles away from specified regions within a microstructure and by generating point density peaks at random locations within a microstructure. Both isotropic and anisotropic inhomogeneous distributions were considered to simulate distribution patterns in PMMCs before and after mechanical working. It was found that the coefficient of variation of the mean near-neighbour distance (COV(dmean)), derived from particle interfaces using finite-body tessellation, was essentially independent of particle shape, size distribution, orientation and area fraction in homogeneous (random) distributions, but showed great sensitivity to inhomogeneity. Increased values of COV(dmean) were seen for both forms of inhomogeneous distributions considered here, with little influence of particle morphology. The COV(dmean) was also seen to be sensitive to anisotropic clustering, the presence of which was identified via nearest-neighbour angles and cell orientations. Although generally formulated for PMMCs, the present results may be generalized to other systems containing low aspect ratio finite bodies of low to moderate area fraction.

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More information

Published date: 2001
Keywords: coefficient of variation, finite-body tessellation, homogeneity, image analysis, metal matrix composite, mean near-neighbour distance, particle distribution, tessellation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 21596
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/21596
ISSN: 0022-2720
PURE UUID: b3d386f4-2171-4e08-b940-ab4eed6cb7b7

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 13 Mar 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:31

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Contributors

Author: N. Yang
Author: J. Boselli
Author: I. Sinclair

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