{"title":"Mechanical Profile and 3D Printability of Cellular Structures","authors":"Sina Rastegarzadeh, Samuel Muthusamy, Jida Huang","doi":"10.1115/msec2022-85541","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n Microstructures are critical elements for mechanical metamaterials design and fabrication. Tailoring the internal microscale structural pattern can achieve a much broader range of bulk properties than the constituent materials, thus enabling the metamaterial design with extraordinary properties. Studying the mechanical properties and fabricability of microstructures is critical for understanding metamaterials’ structural design and macroscale performances. This paper categorizes the commonly designed microstructures into two main classes: deterministic implicit function-based and stochastic nature-based designing strategies. The mechanical properties and 3D printability of typical instances within the two classes are studied and experimentally analyzed. Specifically, we investigate the macroscale mechanical properties (e.g., Young’s modulus, shear modulus, bulk modulus, percentage of anisotropy) of microstructures defined with triply periodic minimal surfaces (TPMS), Fourier series-based functions (FSFs), Gaussian random filed-based (GRF), and Voronoi-based microstructures. Asymptotic homogenization is exploited herein to study the macroscale properties of different microstructures, and the manufacturability of the structures is experimentally analyzed and validated on an FDM printer. We summarize the mechanical profiles and manufacturability of these microstructures defined by various principles. The resulting mechanical profiles and manufacturability of microstructures provide a reasonable basis for establishing a microstructure database and shed light on the on-demand structural units generation for metamaterial design and fabrication.","PeriodicalId":45459,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Micro and Nano-Manufacturing","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-06-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Micro and Nano-Manufacturing","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1115/msec2022-85541","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"ENGINEERING, MANUFACTURING","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Microstructures are critical elements for mechanical metamaterials design and fabrication. Tailoring the internal microscale structural pattern can achieve a much broader range of bulk properties than the constituent materials, thus enabling the metamaterial design with extraordinary properties. Studying the mechanical properties and fabricability of microstructures is critical for understanding metamaterials’ structural design and macroscale performances. This paper categorizes the commonly designed microstructures into two main classes: deterministic implicit function-based and stochastic nature-based designing strategies. The mechanical properties and 3D printability of typical instances within the two classes are studied and experimentally analyzed. Specifically, we investigate the macroscale mechanical properties (e.g., Young’s modulus, shear modulus, bulk modulus, percentage of anisotropy) of microstructures defined with triply periodic minimal surfaces (TPMS), Fourier series-based functions (FSFs), Gaussian random filed-based (GRF), and Voronoi-based microstructures. Asymptotic homogenization is exploited herein to study the macroscale properties of different microstructures, and the manufacturability of the structures is experimentally analyzed and validated on an FDM printer. We summarize the mechanical profiles and manufacturability of these microstructures defined by various principles. The resulting mechanical profiles and manufacturability of microstructures provide a reasonable basis for establishing a microstructure database and shed light on the on-demand structural units generation for metamaterial design and fabrication.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Micro and Nano-Manufacturing provides a forum for the rapid dissemination of original theoretical and applied research in the areas of micro- and nano-manufacturing that are related to process innovation, accuracy, and precision, throughput enhancement, material utilization, compact equipment development, environmental and life-cycle analysis, and predictive modeling of manufacturing processes with feature sizes less than one hundred micrometers. Papers addressing special needs in emerging areas, such as biomedical devices, drug manufacturing, water and energy, are also encouraged. Areas of interest including, but not limited to: Unit micro- and nano-manufacturing processes; Hybrid manufacturing processes combining bottom-up and top-down processes; Hybrid manufacturing processes utilizing various energy sources (optical, mechanical, electrical, solar, etc.) to achieve multi-scale features and resolution; High-throughput micro- and nano-manufacturing processes; Equipment development; Predictive modeling and simulation of materials and/or systems enabling point-of-need or scaled-up micro- and nano-manufacturing; Metrology at the micro- and nano-scales over large areas; Sensors and sensor integration; Design algorithms for multi-scale manufacturing; Life cycle analysis; Logistics and material handling related to micro- and nano-manufacturing.