Network approximation for boundary-value problems with discontinuous coefficients and a finite number of inclusions

This chapter follows closely the work of Berlyand and Kolpakov (2001). The approach presented here was applied to the modeling of particle-filled composite materials. It is based on dual variational bounds and has been applied to both two-and three-dimensional problems (Berlyand et al., 2005). Furth...

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Published inIntroduction to the Network Approximation Method for Materials Modeling Vol. Series Number 148; pp. 51 - 99
Main Authors Berlyand, Leonid, Kolpakov, Alexander G., Novikov, Alexei
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published United Kingdom Cambridge University Press 13.12.2012
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Summary:This chapter follows closely the work of Berlyand and Kolpakov (2001). The approach presented here was applied to the modeling of particle-filled composite materials. It is based on dual variational bounds and has been applied to both two-and three-dimensional problems (Berlyand et al., 2005). Further development of this approach allowed us to obtain error estimates for the network approximation (Berlyand and Novikov, 2002). It also provides answers to several unsettled physical questions, such as polydispersity at high concentration (Berlyand and Kolpakov, 2001; Berlyand and Mityushev, 2005), weak and strong blow up of the effective viscosity of disordered suspensions (Berlyand and Panchenko, 2007), and it establishes a connection between the notion of capacitance and the network approximation (Kolpakov, 2005, 2006a). Subsequently this approach was generalized for fluids. Next a new “fictitious fluid” approach was introduced in Berlyand et al. (2005). This approach led to a complete description of all singular terms in the asymptotics of the viscous dissipation rate of such suspensions and provided a comprehensive picture of microflows in highly packed suspensions. Note that previous works addressed only certain singularities and therefore provided a partial analysis of such microflows. It also allowed us to predict an anomalous singularity in two-dimensional problems (thin films) which has no analog in three-dimensions (Berlyand and Panchenko, 2007).
ISBN:110702823X
9781107028234
DOI:10.1017/CBO9781139235952.004