Abstract
Elastic stiffness
is one of the most fundamental properties of materials. Design of the
microstructures with isotropic stiffness has been an attractive area in
the field of metamaterials
for over three decades. Despite many classes of isotropic
microstructures, exploring novel isotropic microstructures based on
innovative mechanics principles has attracted great and continuing
interests. This paper presents a novel family of isotropic hierarchical
microstructures (Iso-HMs). These hierarchical microstructures are
modeled by replacing the solid parts of prescribed single-level
microstructures with arrayed microstructures in the second level, where
the key task is to identify the correct geometries of the second-level
microstructures by conducting parameter space exploring. These Iso-HMs
realize isotropic stiffness based on synergistic deformations of the
members in the two levels, which is essentially different from existing
isotropic microstructures replying on deformations of the members in a
single level. Two categories of Iso-HMs with rectangular holes and
Vidergauze-type struts are designed. Considering the large size
difference in the designed Iso-HMs, additive manufacturing
becomes a unique technique for manufacturing the designed Iso-HMs,
where the size ratio between the 3D-printed specimens and the minimal
features reaches 400:1. Both numerical and experimental results validate
the isotropic stiffness of the designed Iso-HMs. Furthermore, the
results of a microstructural instability analysis show that the designed
Iso-HMs can gain improved buckling strength up to a hundred times
higher than their single-level counterparts. The hierarchical design
provides a new way to identify novel functional microstructures for
applications, and the hierarchical configurations expand the space of
the already-known families of isotropic microstructures.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 111895 |
Journal | Materials and Design |
Volume | 229 |
Number of pages | 18 |
ISSN | 0264-1275 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2023 |
Keywords
- Additive Manufacturing
- Hierarchical microstructure
- Isotropic stiffness
- Mechanical metamaterial
- Microstructural instability