Tough Composites Inspired by Mineralized Natural Materials: Computation, 3D printing, and Testing

Composites play an important role as structural materials in a range of engineering fields due to their potential to combine the best mechanical properties of their constituents. In biology, composites are ubiquitous and exhibit fascinating and precise architectures at fine length scales; bone, hexa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced functional materials 2013-09, Vol.23 (36), p.4629-4638
Hauptverfasser: Dimas, Leon S., Bratzel, Graham H., Eylon, Ido, Buehler, Markus J.
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container_end_page 4638
container_issue 36
container_start_page 4629
container_title Advanced functional materials
container_volume 23
creator Dimas, Leon S.
Bratzel, Graham H.
Eylon, Ido
Buehler, Markus J.
description Composites play an important role as structural materials in a range of engineering fields due to their potential to combine the best mechanical properties of their constituents. In biology, composites are ubiquitous and exhibit fascinating and precise architectures at fine length scales; bone, hexactinellid sponges and nacreous abalone shells are prime examples. Here, typical biological composite topologies are emulated with multi‐material 3D printing at micrometer resolution. From base materials that are brittle and exhibit catastrophic failure, synthetic composites are created with superior fracture mechanical properties exhibiting deformation and fracture mechanisms reminiscent of mineralized biological composites. This complementary computational model predictions of fracture mechanisms and trends in mechanical properties are in good agreement with the experimental findings. The reported findings confirm that specific topological arrangements of soft and stiff phases as a design mechanism enhances the mechanical behavior in composites. This study demonstrates 3D printing as a means to create fracture resistant composites. Moreover, these results indicate that one can use computer models to design composite materials to exhibit tailored fracture properties and then use 3D printing to synthesize materials with such mechanical performance. Tough composites with bioinspired topologies and microscale features are designed, 3D printed and mechanically tested. Discrete simulation methods are used to identify fracture resistant composite topologies. Subsequently, additive manufacturing is used for rapid fabrication of the computationally conceived composites. In agreement with the simulation predictions the 3D printed composites exhibit fracture resistance far superior to their individual constituents.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/adfm.201300215
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subjects 3D printing
bio-inspired materials
Biological
composites
Computation
Computer simulation
Fracture mechanics
Mechanical properties
Three dimensional
Topology
title Tough Composites Inspired by Mineralized Natural Materials: Computation, 3D printing, and Testing
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