A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Creep aspects of softwood from the cell-wall level to structures
This thesis addresses the intricate mechanical behaviour of natural materials, with a particular focus on wood. Despite millennia of use, understanding the mechanical behaviour of wood materials remains challenging due to their complex microstructures. For instance, they exhibit variations in properties among samples, nonlinear behaviour under elevated loads, and are sensitive to alterations in moisture content. Wood and related natural biobased materials hold immense potential due to their renewability, cost-effectiveness, eco-friendliness, and ease of use in sustainable construction. Wood boasts remarkable stiffness and strength along its primary axis, surpassing many man-made materials in strength-to-weight ratios. However, its anisotropic and heterogeneous nature gives rise to challenges, necessitating the consideration of multiple parameters for accurate characterization to be used in design. Wood is intrinsically heterogeneous, leading to considerable variations in local stresses and deformations during loading. To address these microstructural effects on macroscopically measurable phenomena, mathematical homogenization methods, established since the 1970s, have found applications in material mechanics, including both fibre composites and wood. In recent years, there has been a growing focus on the viscoelastic behaviour of composites and timber structures, given their increased long-term use in load-carrying applications. While numerous investigations have explored the relationship between the microstructure of wood and its elastic properties, few studies have explored the connection between microstructure and viscoelastic properties. The thesis focuses on the static and, more notably, on the time-dependent mechanical properties of wood, bridging the gap from cell-wall creep to structures. It includes experiments and numerical work, culminating in the development of a material model suitable for orthotropic materials like wood. The multiscale model establishes a link between microstructural parameters and ...
Creep aspects of softwood from the cell-wall level to structures
This thesis addresses the intricate mechanical behaviour of natural materials, with a particular focus on wood. Despite millennia of use, understanding the mechanical behaviour of wood materials remains challenging due to their complex microstructures. For instance, they exhibit variations in properties among samples, nonlinear behaviour under elevated loads, and are sensitive to alterations in moisture content. Wood and related natural biobased materials hold immense potential due to their renewability, cost-effectiveness, eco-friendliness, and ease of use in sustainable construction. Wood boasts remarkable stiffness and strength along its primary axis, surpassing many man-made materials in strength-to-weight ratios. However, its anisotropic and heterogeneous nature gives rise to challenges, necessitating the consideration of multiple parameters for accurate characterization to be used in design. Wood is intrinsically heterogeneous, leading to considerable variations in local stresses and deformations during loading. To address these microstructural effects on macroscopically measurable phenomena, mathematical homogenization methods, established since the 1970s, have found applications in material mechanics, including both fibre composites and wood. In recent years, there has been a growing focus on the viscoelastic behaviour of composites and timber structures, given their increased long-term use in load-carrying applications. While numerous investigations have explored the relationship between the microstructure of wood and its elastic properties, few studies have explored the connection between microstructure and viscoelastic properties. The thesis focuses on the static and, more notably, on the time-dependent mechanical properties of wood, bridging the gap from cell-wall creep to structures. It includes experiments and numerical work, culminating in the development of a material model suitable for orthotropic materials like wood. The multiscale model establishes a link between microstructural parameters and ...
Creep aspects of softwood from the cell-wall level to structures
Bengtsson, Rhodel (author)
2023-01-01
2322
Theses
Electronic Resource
English
Modelling the elastic properties of softwood. Part I: The cell-wall lamellae
British Library Online Contents | 1998
|Progress in the modelling of reversible and irreversible mechano-sorptive creep of softwood
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2004
|Comparison of two composite descriptive approach of cell wall anisotropy in normal wood of softwood
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2004
|Microstructural and physical aspects of heat treated wood, part 1: softwood
BASE | 2006
|British Library Online Contents | 2017
|