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The New Jersey Institute of Technology's
Electronic Theses & Dissertations Project

Title: Implementation of a two-dimensional discrete element method to describe granular materials composed of elliptical cohesionless particles
Author: Martinez Alvez, Juan Jose
View Online: njit-etd2003-008
(xii, 63 pages ~ 2.2 MB pdf)
Department: Department of Mechanical Engineering
Degree: Master of Science
Program: Mechanical Engineering
Document Type: Thesis
Advisory Committee: Rosato, Anthony D. (Committee chair)
Bukiet, Bruce G. (Committee member)
Aubry, N. (Committee member)
Date: 2003-01
Keywords: Elliptical cohesionless particles
Granular materials
Collision detection
Availability: Unrestricted
Abstract:

This work is aimed at developing a discrete element simulation that models the contact between elliptical grains or particles in granular materials. The goal is to implement an algorithm to carry out collision detection between ellipses as well as ellipsoidal objects. The practical issue here is that the real shape of macroscopic grains can be approximated better using elliptical curves than using spherical curves. In addition, the simulation model will also be valid for spheres, since these objects are special cases of ellipsoids.

An accurate contact detection algorithm was investigated by means of two different formulations. The first formulation determines the minimum distance of one ellipse with respect to another ellipse and vice versa and finds the two closest points. Then it analyzes the position of these two points. However, this formulation is not robust enough to determine all the contact detections tested. The first formulation fails in cases when the distance between centers is unrealistically close and the major and minor axes are large. The second formulation determines the overlap distance. This method was successful in each of the realistic cases tested. The second formulation, as well as the first formulation, fails in unphysical cases, i.e., the distance between the centers of the ellipses is much smaller than the size of the major and minor axes of the ellipses. The implementation of a contact force formulation with minimum overlap distance will remove any possibility that these cases occur.


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