Sammanfattning

The characterisation of wood’s fracture behaviour is a challenging task due to its inherently complex microstructure and natural variability. Consequently, to accurately model wood for engineering applications, deterministic input parameters are rarely sufficient in, for example, finite element models; the stochastic nature of the material must be considered. In the present work, we aim to quantify the variability in the fracture behaviour of two wood species: Norway spruce, which is commonly used for structural purposes in Europe, and birch, which could be an advantageous complement to Norway spruce, mainly thanks to its stiffer and stronger mechanical properties. The fracture behaviour is characterised through the three parameters that govern a material’s brittleness: the stiffness, the strength and the specific fracture energy. By formulating a parameter estimation problem based in probability theory, we use Bayesian optimisation to estimate statistical distributions of the fracture parameters of interest. These distributions are multi-variate distributions and thus contain information about the mean values, variability and dependence among the parameters. It is shown that by using random samples from the acquired distributions as input parameters to finite element models, variability observed in experimental testing is recovered well.
Originalspråksvenska
Artikelnummer111820
Antal sidor24
TidskriftEngineering Fracture Mechanics
Volym333
Nummer111820
DOI
StatusPublished - 2026

Ämnesklassifikation (UKÄ)

  • Byggkonstruktion
  • Trävetenskap (Här ingår: Träteknologi)

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