Porous media with fluid-saturated microchannels, prevalent in biomaterials, tissue engineering materials and flexible electronic devices, can be modelled as transverse isotropic materials. Surface effects can influence significantly the macro-mechanical responses of such materials, particularly for soft materials with micro- or nano-scale channels. In this study, we first develop constitutive laws for fluid saturated porous materials with microchannels by integrating the top-down (homogenization) approach with the bottom-up (micromechanics) approach. We then explicitly establish a connection between surface effects and macro-mechanical responses. Employing the generalized self-consistent model (GSCM), we estimate the effective parameters (i.e., coefficients in constitutive equations governing macro-mechanical responses), with fluid compressibility and surface effects accounted for. Our findings reveal that, as surface energy increases, the effective transverse shear modulus is enlarged, the effective plane strain bulk modulus, the unit uniaxial straining modulus and the cross modulus are all reduced, but the axial shear modulus remains nearly unchanged. As an application, we characterize the mechanical behaviors of the transverse isotropic fluid-saturated porous material with surface effects by connecting the classic Mandel solution with the estimated effective parameters. The pore pressure exhibits the Mandel-Cryer effect. The insights gained from this study are valuable for comprehending and exploring the intricate ways in which surface effects influence the mechanical responses of transversely isotropic fluid-saturated porous materials featuring sufficiently small channels.
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