MODELLING OF THE MECHANICAL BEHAVIOUR OF HEAVILY OVER-CONSOLIDATED BAGASSE
By F PLAZA
A BETTER UNDERSTANDING of the behaviour of prepared cane and bagasse, and the
ability to model the mechanical behaviour of bagasse as it is squeezed in a milling unit
to extract juice, would help identify how to improve the current process, for example to
reduce final bagasse moisture. Previous investigations have proven that juice flow
through bagasse obeys Darcy’s permeability law, that the grip of the rough surface of
the grooves on the bagasse can be represented by the Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion
for soils, and that the internal mechanical behaviour of the bagasse is critical state
behaviour similar to that for sand and clay. Current Finite Element Models (FEM)
available in commercial software have adequate permeability models. However, no
commercially available software seems to contain an adequate mechanical model for
bagasse. The same software contains a few material models for soil and other materials,
while the coding of hundreds of developed models for soil and other materials remains
confidential at universities and government research centres. Progress has been made in
the past 10 years towards implementing a mechanical model for bagasse in finite
element software code. This paper builds on that progress and carries out a further step
towards obtaining an adequate material model. The fifth and final loading condition
outlined previously, shearing of heavily over-consolidated bagasse, is outlined.