TY - JOUR
T1 - A state-of-the-art review of discrete element method for asphalt mixtures : Model generation methods, contact constitutive models and application directions
AU - Xue, Bin
AU - Que, Yun
AU - Pei, Jianzhong
AU - Ma, Xiaoyan
AU - Wang, Di
AU - Yuan, Yan
AU - Zhang, He
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors gratefully acknowledge the support provided by the National Natural Science Foundation of China ( 52178408 , 41772297 ); Natural Science Foundation of the Fujian Province , China ( 2022J05021 ); Open Funding of Engineering Research Center of Ministry of Education for Traffic Pavement Materials, Chang’an University ( 300102312502 ); Educational and Scientific Research Project of young and middle-aged teachers in Fujian Provincial Department of Education ( JAT210013 ).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/2/2
Y1 - 2024/2/2
N2 - Asphalt mixture is a typical granular material, and its macroscopic properties are closely related to the interaction behavior of aggregate particles at the micro scales. Discrete element method (DEM), as an important numerical simulation method in granular mechanics, plays an increasingly important role in analyzing the aggregate packing characteristics, skeleton features, predicting mechanical and pavement performance of asphalt mixtures. However, the complexity of the composition of asphalt mixtures, including the particle size, shape, spatial distribution of aggregate particles, and the viscoelasticity of asphalt binders sensitive to temperature, load, and time, increases the difficulty of constructing DEM models of asphalt mixtures, selecting contact constitutive models, and determining parameters, which directly affects the accuracy and efficiency of DEM simulations. In this review, the generation methods of idealized models, image models, and user-defined models currently used to generate DEM models of asphalt mixtures were summarized in detail. Conventional contact constitutive models, including elastic and viscoelastic contact stiffness constitutive models, as well as fracture models including bonding models and cohesive softening models, were discussed. Moreover, special contact constitutive models, such as damage, self-healing, and two-stage contact models considering compaction evolution, were also summarized and discussed. Then, the contact constitutive model parameters were classified and related determination methods were summarized, and the latest application directions of DEM in current asphalt mixture research were classified. On this basis, relevant discussions were carried out, and the challenges and future development prospects faced by DEM in asphalt mixture research were proposed.
AB - Asphalt mixture is a typical granular material, and its macroscopic properties are closely related to the interaction behavior of aggregate particles at the micro scales. Discrete element method (DEM), as an important numerical simulation method in granular mechanics, plays an increasingly important role in analyzing the aggregate packing characteristics, skeleton features, predicting mechanical and pavement performance of asphalt mixtures. However, the complexity of the composition of asphalt mixtures, including the particle size, shape, spatial distribution of aggregate particles, and the viscoelasticity of asphalt binders sensitive to temperature, load, and time, increases the difficulty of constructing DEM models of asphalt mixtures, selecting contact constitutive models, and determining parameters, which directly affects the accuracy and efficiency of DEM simulations. In this review, the generation methods of idealized models, image models, and user-defined models currently used to generate DEM models of asphalt mixtures were summarized in detail. Conventional contact constitutive models, including elastic and viscoelastic contact stiffness constitutive models, as well as fracture models including bonding models and cohesive softening models, were discussed. Moreover, special contact constitutive models, such as damage, self-healing, and two-stage contact models considering compaction evolution, were also summarized and discussed. Then, the contact constitutive model parameters were classified and related determination methods were summarized, and the latest application directions of DEM in current asphalt mixture research were classified. On this basis, relevant discussions were carried out, and the challenges and future development prospects faced by DEM in asphalt mixture research were proposed.
KW - Application
KW - Asphalt mixture
KW - Contact constitutive model
KW - Discrete element method
KW - Model generation method
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85183003792&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2023.134842
DO - 10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2023.134842
M3 - Review Article
AN - SCOPUS:85183003792
SN - 0950-0618
VL - 414
JO - Construction and Building Materials
JF - Construction and Building Materials
M1 - 134842
ER -