This paper is concerned with the effective transport properties of
heterogeneous media in which there is a high contrast between the phase
diffusivities. In this case the transient response of the slow phase induces a
memory effect at the macroscopic scale, which needs to be included in a
macroscopic continuum description. This paper focuses on the slow phase, which
we take as a dispersion of inclusions of arbitrary shape. We revisit the linear
diffusion problem in such inclusions in order to identify the structure of the
effective (average) inclusion response to a chemical load applied on the
inclusion boundary. We identify a chemical creep function (similar to the creep
function of viscoelasticity), from which we construct estimates with a reduced
number of relaxation modes. The proposed estimates admit an equivalent
representation based on a finite number of internal variables. These estimates
allow us to predict the average inclusion response under arbitrary time-varying
boundary conditions at very low computational cost. A heuristic generalisation
to concentration-dependent diffusion coefficient is also presented. The
proposed estimates for the effective transient response of an inclusion can
serve as a building block for the formulation of multi-inclusion homogenisation
schemes.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures. Submitted to ZAMM (under review