Porous media, ranging from bones to concrete and from batteries to architected lattices, pose difficult challenges in fully harnessing for engineering applications due to their complex and variable structures. Accurate and rapid assessment of their mechanical behavior is both cha
...
Porous media, ranging from bones to concrete and from batteries to architected lattices, pose difficult challenges in fully harnessing for engineering applications due to their complex and variable structures. Accurate and rapid assessment of their mechanical behavior is both challenging and essential, and traditional methods such as destructive testing and finite element analysis can be costly, computationally demanding, and time consuming. Machine learning (ML) offers a promising alternative for predicting mechanical behavior by leveraging data-driven correlations. However, with such structural complexity and diverse morphology among porous media, the question becomes how to effectively characterize these materials to provide robust feature spaces for ML that are descriptive, succinct, and easily interpreted. Here, we developed an automated methodology to determine porous material strength. This method uses scalar morphological descriptors, known as Minkowski functionals, to describe the porous space. From there, we conduct uniaxial compression experiments for generating material stress-strain curves, and then train an ML model to predict the curves using said morphological descriptors. This framework seeks to expedite the analysis and prediction of stress-strain behavior in porous materials and lay the groundwork for future models that can predict mechanical behaviors beyond compression.