Abstract

Many media are divided into elementary units with irregular shape and size, as exemplified by domains in magnetic materials, bubbles in foams, or cells in biological tissues. Such media are essentially characterized by geometrical disorder of their elementary units, which we term cells. Cells set a reference scale at which are often assessed parameters and fields reflecting material properties and state. Here, we consider the spectral analysis of spatially varying fields. Such analysis is difficult in geometrically disordered media, because space discretization based on standard coordinate systems is not commensurate with the natural discretization into geometrically disordered cells. Indeed, we found that two classical spectral methods, the Fast Fourier Transform and the Graph Fourier transform, fail to reproduce all expected properties of spectra of plane waves and of white noise. We therefore built a method, which we call Cellular Fourier Transform (CFT), to analyze cell-scale fields, which comprise both discrete fields defined only at cell level and continuous fields smoothed out from their sub-cell variations. Our approach is based on the construction of a discrete operator suited to the disordered geometry and on the computation of its eigenvectors, which, respectively, play the same role as the Laplace operator and sine waves in Euclidean coordinate systems. We show that CFT has the expected behavior for sinusoidal fields and for random fields with long-range correlations. Our approach for spectral analysis is suited to any geometrically disordered material, such as a biological tissue with complex geometry, opening the path to systematic multiscale analyses of material behavior.

Highlights

  • The past decades have seen a growing interest in geometrically disordered media [1] such as liquid and solid foams [2,3,4], granular materials [5], or biological tissues [6,7]

  • The cellular Fourier transform (CFT) relies on defining harmonics as the eigenvectors of the discrete Laplace operator given by Eq (13)

  • We considered here the harmonic decomposition of fields defined over disordered cellular media

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Summary

Introduction

The past decades have seen a growing interest in geometrically disordered media [1] such as liquid and solid foams [2,3,4], granular materials [5], or biological tissues [6,7]. Imaging of biological tissue is performed with serial block-face scanning electron microscopy [24] or with confocal microscopy of living samples [21] Using efficient algorithms such as the watershed transform [25], it has been possible to segment these two-dimensional (2D) and threedimensional (3D) images, i.e., to extract the geometry and the arrangement of the cells, as performed in foams [26], granular material [27], or in biological tissues [28].

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