Large deformations of a soft porous material

Compressing a porous material will decrease the volume of the pore space, driving fluid out. Similarly, injecting fluid into a porous material can expand the pore space, distorting the solid skeleton. This poromechanical coupling has applications ranging from tissue mechanics to hydrogeology. The cl...

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Main Authors: MacMinn, C, Dufresne, E, Wettlaufer, J
Format: Journal article
Published: American Physical Society 2016
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author MacMinn, C
Dufresne, E
Wettlaufer, J
author_facet MacMinn, C
Dufresne, E
Wettlaufer, J
author_sort MacMinn, C
collection OXFORD
description Compressing a porous material will decrease the volume of the pore space, driving fluid out. Similarly, injecting fluid into a porous material can expand the pore space, distorting the solid skeleton. This poromechanical coupling has applications ranging from tissue mechanics to hydrogeology. The classical theory of linear poroelasticity captures this coupling by combining Darcy's law with Terzaghi's effective stress and linear elasticity in a linearized kinematic framework. Linear poroelasticity is a good model for very small deformations, but it becomes increasingly inappropriate for moderate to large deformations, which are common in the context of phenomena such as swelling and damage, and for soft materials such as gels and tissues. The well-known theory of large-deformation poroelasticity combines Darcy's law with Terzaghi's effective stress and nonlinear elasticity in a rigorous kinematic framework. This theory has been used extensively in biomechanics to model large elastic deformations in soft tissues, and in geomechanics to model large elastoplastic deformations in soils. Here, we first provide an overview and discussion of this theory with an emphasis on the physics of poromechanical coupling. We present the large-deformation theory in an Eulerian framework to minimize the mathematical complexity, and we show how this nonlinear theory simplifies to linear poroelasticity under the assumption of small strain. We then compare the predictions of linear poroelasticity with those of large-deformation poroelasticity in the context of two uniaxial model problems: Fluid outflow driven by an applied mechanical load (the consolidation problem) and compression driven by a steady fluid throughflow. We use these problems to explore the steady and dynamical errors associated with the linear model in both situations, as well as the impact of introducing a deformation-dependent permeability.
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spelling oxford-uuid:be91c9d9-6e12-4b63-9c0c-1ad242bbc5482022-03-27T05:40:35ZLarge deformations of a soft porous materialJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:be91c9d9-6e12-4b63-9c0c-1ad242bbc548Symplectic Elements at OxfordAmerican Physical Society2016MacMinn, CDufresne, EWettlaufer, JCompressing a porous material will decrease the volume of the pore space, driving fluid out. Similarly, injecting fluid into a porous material can expand the pore space, distorting the solid skeleton. This poromechanical coupling has applications ranging from tissue mechanics to hydrogeology. The classical theory of linear poroelasticity captures this coupling by combining Darcy's law with Terzaghi's effective stress and linear elasticity in a linearized kinematic framework. Linear poroelasticity is a good model for very small deformations, but it becomes increasingly inappropriate for moderate to large deformations, which are common in the context of phenomena such as swelling and damage, and for soft materials such as gels and tissues. The well-known theory of large-deformation poroelasticity combines Darcy's law with Terzaghi's effective stress and nonlinear elasticity in a rigorous kinematic framework. This theory has been used extensively in biomechanics to model large elastic deformations in soft tissues, and in geomechanics to model large elastoplastic deformations in soils. Here, we first provide an overview and discussion of this theory with an emphasis on the physics of poromechanical coupling. We present the large-deformation theory in an Eulerian framework to minimize the mathematical complexity, and we show how this nonlinear theory simplifies to linear poroelasticity under the assumption of small strain. We then compare the predictions of linear poroelasticity with those of large-deformation poroelasticity in the context of two uniaxial model problems: Fluid outflow driven by an applied mechanical load (the consolidation problem) and compression driven by a steady fluid throughflow. We use these problems to explore the steady and dynamical errors associated with the linear model in both situations, as well as the impact of introducing a deformation-dependent permeability.
spellingShingle MacMinn, C
Dufresne, E
Wettlaufer, J
Large deformations of a soft porous material
title Large deformations of a soft porous material
title_full Large deformations of a soft porous material
title_fullStr Large deformations of a soft porous material
title_full_unstemmed Large deformations of a soft porous material
title_short Large deformations of a soft porous material
title_sort large deformations of a soft porous material
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AT wettlauferj largedeformationsofasoftporousmaterial