Discrete-element modelling: methods and applications in the environmental sciences
                Authored by M Bithell, K Richards, M Dove, R Hodge
                
                    Date Published: 2004
                
                
                    DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2004.1429
                
                
                    Sponsors:
                    
                        United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
                        
                        National Institute of Environmental e-Science
                        
                
                
                    Platforms:
                    
                        No platforms listed
                    
                
                
                    Model Documentation:
                    
                        Other Narrative
                        
                        Mathematical description
                        
                
                
                    Model Code URLs:
                    
                        Model code not found
                    
                
                Abstract
                This paper introduces a Theme Issue on discrete-element modelling, based
on research presented at an interdisciplinary workshop on this topic
organized by the National Institute of Environmental e-Science. The
purpose of the workshop, and this collection of papers, is to highlight
the opportunities for environmental scientists provided by (primarily)
off-lattice methods in the discrete-element family, and to draw on the
experiences of research communities in which the use of these methods is
more advanced. Applications of these methods may be conceived in a wide
range of situations where dynamic processes involve a series of
fundamental entities C, (particles or elements) whose interaction
results in emergent macroscale structures. Indeed, the capacity of these
methods to reveal emergent properties at the meso- and macroscale, that
reflect microscale interactions, is a significant part of their
attraction. They assist with the definition of constitutive material
properties at scales beyond those at which measurement and theory have
been developed, and help us to understand self-organizing behaviours.
The paper discusses technical issues including the contact models
required to represent collision behaviour, computational aspects of
particle tracking and collision detection, and scales at which
experimental data are required and choices about modelling style must be
made. It then illustrates the applicability of DEM and other forms of
individual-based modelling in environmental and related fields as
diverse as mineralogy, geomaterials, mass movement and fluvial sediment
transport processes, as well as developments in ecology, zoology and the
human sciences where the relationship between individual behaviour and
group dynamics can be explored using a partially similar methodological
framework.
                
Tags
                
                    behavior
                
                    Dynamics
                
                    Particle model
                
                    Deformation
                
                    Transport
                
                    Propagation
                
                    Field
                
                    Dem simulation
                
                    Friction