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Molecular dynamics simulations of granular compaction

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Molecular dynamics simulations of granular compaction. / Sanchez-Castillo, FX; Anwar, J; Heyes, DM.
In: Chemistry of Materials, Vol. 15, No. 18, 09.09.2003, p. 3417-3430.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Sanchez-Castillo, FX, Anwar, J & Heyes, DM 2003, 'Molecular dynamics simulations of granular compaction', Chemistry of Materials, vol. 15, no. 18, pp. 3417-3430. https://doi.org/10.1021/cm030176a

APA

Sanchez-Castillo, FX., Anwar, J., & Heyes, DM. (2003). Molecular dynamics simulations of granular compaction. Chemistry of Materials, 15(18), 3417-3430. https://doi.org/10.1021/cm030176a

Vancouver

Sanchez-Castillo FX, Anwar J, Heyes DM. Molecular dynamics simulations of granular compaction. Chemistry of Materials. 2003 Sept 9;15(18):3417-3430. doi: 10.1021/cm030176a

Author

Sanchez-Castillo, FX ; Anwar, J ; Heyes, DM. / Molecular dynamics simulations of granular compaction. In: Chemistry of Materials. 2003 ; Vol. 15, No. 18. pp. 3417-3430.

Bibtex

@article{45c14ad27a81424db02c820b6e3ffbe0,
title = "Molecular dynamics simulations of granular compaction",
abstract = "We have carried out simulations of the compaction of model granular beds constructed from Lennard-Jones (LJ) particles using nonequilibrium molecular dynamics (MD). The systems simulated comprised a model die containing either a single granule or many granules that were compacted uniaxially by a vertically moving top wall. The simulations while atomistic in nature can also be considered to have a mesoscopic significance in that the primary LJ particles represent coarse-grained units that comprise a realistically sized macroscopic granule. This representation enables plastic deformation of the individual granules as well as fusion between granules to be modeled at a fundamental level. As a granule is compressed, the constituent particles move past each other, giving rise to its deformation. In a multigranular system, at the points of contact between granules, the surface particles on adjacent granules interact with each other and reproduce many of the features of intergranular bonding observed in real systems. The proposed model, although simple, captures the essential physics of the compaction process in a transparent way. It is able to encompass the transition from mainly elastic to plastic deformation, which is instrumental in affecting the quality of real tablets. Using the developed model, we have explored the effects of compression rate on the deformation behavior of the powder column, the microstructure, and the integrity of the formed tablet. The simulations reproduced a number of well-known effects found in tableting. At high compaction speeds and increased extent of final compaction the system manifested a strong elastic response, giving rise to a tendency for the tablets to laminate on decompaction. Slower compaction speeds allowed more time for greater internal rearrangement or plastic deformation and produced a more structurally uniform and stable tablet at the end of the cycle. The simulations also revealed the underlying cause for high-pressure {"}hot{"} spots and regions of weak interaction within the tablet where failure can occur. These points or regions invariably corresponded to incoherent interfaces between granule boundaries, and in some instances to interstitial atoms. The mechanical stability of the tablet was found to depend on the effectiveness of the consolidation of the granules, enhanced effectiveness being characterized by more coherent granule boundaries, resulting in a more uniform pressure distribution and stronger granule-granule interactions.",
keywords = "EQUATION, CURVES, DENSITY, BEHAVIOR, POWDER-METALLURGY, COMPRESSION, TABLETS, PRESSURE, ELEMENT MODEL, AUTOMOTIVE PARTS",
author = "FX Sanchez-Castillo and J Anwar and DM Heyes",
year = "2003",
month = sep,
day = "9",
doi = "10.1021/cm030176a",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "3417--3430",
journal = "Chemistry of Materials",
issn = "0897-4756",
publisher = "AMER CHEMICAL SOC",
number = "18",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Molecular dynamics simulations of granular compaction

AU - Sanchez-Castillo, FX

AU - Anwar, J

AU - Heyes, DM

PY - 2003/9/9

Y1 - 2003/9/9

N2 - We have carried out simulations of the compaction of model granular beds constructed from Lennard-Jones (LJ) particles using nonequilibrium molecular dynamics (MD). The systems simulated comprised a model die containing either a single granule or many granules that were compacted uniaxially by a vertically moving top wall. The simulations while atomistic in nature can also be considered to have a mesoscopic significance in that the primary LJ particles represent coarse-grained units that comprise a realistically sized macroscopic granule. This representation enables plastic deformation of the individual granules as well as fusion between granules to be modeled at a fundamental level. As a granule is compressed, the constituent particles move past each other, giving rise to its deformation. In a multigranular system, at the points of contact between granules, the surface particles on adjacent granules interact with each other and reproduce many of the features of intergranular bonding observed in real systems. The proposed model, although simple, captures the essential physics of the compaction process in a transparent way. It is able to encompass the transition from mainly elastic to plastic deformation, which is instrumental in affecting the quality of real tablets. Using the developed model, we have explored the effects of compression rate on the deformation behavior of the powder column, the microstructure, and the integrity of the formed tablet. The simulations reproduced a number of well-known effects found in tableting. At high compaction speeds and increased extent of final compaction the system manifested a strong elastic response, giving rise to a tendency for the tablets to laminate on decompaction. Slower compaction speeds allowed more time for greater internal rearrangement or plastic deformation and produced a more structurally uniform and stable tablet at the end of the cycle. The simulations also revealed the underlying cause for high-pressure "hot" spots and regions of weak interaction within the tablet where failure can occur. These points or regions invariably corresponded to incoherent interfaces between granule boundaries, and in some instances to interstitial atoms. The mechanical stability of the tablet was found to depend on the effectiveness of the consolidation of the granules, enhanced effectiveness being characterized by more coherent granule boundaries, resulting in a more uniform pressure distribution and stronger granule-granule interactions.

AB - We have carried out simulations of the compaction of model granular beds constructed from Lennard-Jones (LJ) particles using nonequilibrium molecular dynamics (MD). The systems simulated comprised a model die containing either a single granule or many granules that were compacted uniaxially by a vertically moving top wall. The simulations while atomistic in nature can also be considered to have a mesoscopic significance in that the primary LJ particles represent coarse-grained units that comprise a realistically sized macroscopic granule. This representation enables plastic deformation of the individual granules as well as fusion between granules to be modeled at a fundamental level. As a granule is compressed, the constituent particles move past each other, giving rise to its deformation. In a multigranular system, at the points of contact between granules, the surface particles on adjacent granules interact with each other and reproduce many of the features of intergranular bonding observed in real systems. The proposed model, although simple, captures the essential physics of the compaction process in a transparent way. It is able to encompass the transition from mainly elastic to plastic deformation, which is instrumental in affecting the quality of real tablets. Using the developed model, we have explored the effects of compression rate on the deformation behavior of the powder column, the microstructure, and the integrity of the formed tablet. The simulations reproduced a number of well-known effects found in tableting. At high compaction speeds and increased extent of final compaction the system manifested a strong elastic response, giving rise to a tendency for the tablets to laminate on decompaction. Slower compaction speeds allowed more time for greater internal rearrangement or plastic deformation and produced a more structurally uniform and stable tablet at the end of the cycle. The simulations also revealed the underlying cause for high-pressure "hot" spots and regions of weak interaction within the tablet where failure can occur. These points or regions invariably corresponded to incoherent interfaces between granule boundaries, and in some instances to interstitial atoms. The mechanical stability of the tablet was found to depend on the effectiveness of the consolidation of the granules, enhanced effectiveness being characterized by more coherent granule boundaries, resulting in a more uniform pressure distribution and stronger granule-granule interactions.

KW - EQUATION

KW - CURVES

KW - DENSITY

KW - BEHAVIOR

KW - POWDER-METALLURGY

KW - COMPRESSION

KW - TABLETS

KW - PRESSURE

KW - ELEMENT MODEL

KW - AUTOMOTIVE PARTS

U2 - 10.1021/cm030176a

DO - 10.1021/cm030176a

M3 - Journal article

VL - 15

SP - 3417

EP - 3430

JO - Chemistry of Materials

JF - Chemistry of Materials

SN - 0897-4756

IS - 18

ER -