Agriculture (Mar 2024)

Discrete Element Model Building and Optimization of Tomato Stalks at Harvest

  • Qimin Gao,
  • Lei Cheng,
  • Renbing Wang,
  • Mingjiang Chen,
  • Weisong Zhao,
  • Jingjing Fu,
  • Zhenwei Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14040531
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. 531

Abstract

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The mechanical properties of tomato stalk, relevant to the harvesting and crushing of tomato vines, significantly impact its harvesting quality and efficiency. Establishing a simulation model, which accurately mirrors these properties, is foundational for designing related mechanical components. The discrete element method models tomato stalk harvesting and is optimized through mechanical tests and simulations. A blend of Plackett–Burman, steepest ascent, and central composite design modeling identified three contact model parameters influencing the maximum stalk shear force. The optimal values of these three parameters were a normal stiffness of 1.04 × 1010 N m−3, tangential stiffness of 7.59 × 109 N m−3, and bond radius of 1.06 mm. The relative error in the simulated versus measured shear force was <1%, affirming the model’s accuracy in characterizing cutting properties. These findings lay the theoretical groundwork for numerical simulations of tomato-stalk-related equipment.

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