New question #680371 on Yade:
https://answers.launchpad.net/yade/+question/680371

Hi,

I have been trying to simulate particle breaking  in triaxial test using 
different ways. As we know, there are two methods for simulating particle 
breaking, one is multigenerationl approach, in which single element break and 
are replaced by a new generation of smaller grains, previously non-existent in 
the simulation. But the problem is that a new generation of spherical particles 
dose not fit into the volume of the lost particle, which means mass 
conservation can't be satisfied.

Recently, I read an article from Ben Nun[1] that using PFC to simulate particle 
breaking. The article describes the following:

We conserve the mass by involving two phases. During the first phase the 
fragments are prescribed and randomly rotated, without conserving the mass, as 
illustrated in figure 6. However, a rapid linear expansion is then introduced 
in the second phase to gain back the overall solid mass.
Our mass conservation strategy is supported by the identification of two 
distinct dynamic timescales during crushing: (i) the local timescale, through 
the rapid rearrangement of the fragments that occurs immediately after a 
particle splits and (ii) the global timescale, from the dynamics of the 
boundary conditions (here, the moving walls).

My questions is :
Can Yade complete the above two processes? If yes, which example can help me to 
simulate, if not, can you give me some suggestions.


[1]The role of self-organization during confined comminution of granular 
materials. 
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.662.5312&rep=rep1&type=pdf

Thanks,
Cloud

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