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Design of Kinematic Connectors for Microstructured Materials Produced by Additive Manufacturing

The main characteristic of materials with a functional gradient is the progressive composition or the structure variation across its geometry. This results in the properties variation in one or more specific directions, according to the functional application requirements. Cellular structure flexibi...

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Autores principales: Silva, Miguel R., Dias-de-Oliveira, João A., Pereira, António M., Alves, Nuno M., Sampaio, Álvaro M., Pontes, António J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8125566/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34066642
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym13091500
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author Silva, Miguel R.
Dias-de-Oliveira, João A.
Pereira, António M.
Alves, Nuno M.
Sampaio, Álvaro M.
Pontes, António J.
author_facet Silva, Miguel R.
Dias-de-Oliveira, João A.
Pereira, António M.
Alves, Nuno M.
Sampaio, Álvaro M.
Pontes, António J.
author_sort Silva, Miguel R.
collection PubMed
description The main characteristic of materials with a functional gradient is the progressive composition or the structure variation across its geometry. This results in the properties variation in one or more specific directions, according to the functional application requirements. Cellular structure flexibility in tailoring properties is employed frequently to design functionally-graded materials. Topology optimisation methods are powerful tools to functionally graded materials design with cellular structure geometry, although continuity between adjacent unit-cells in gradient directions remains a restriction. It is mandatory to attain a manufacturable part to guarantee the connectedness between adjoining microstructures, namely by ensuring that the solid regions on the microstructure’s borders i.e., kinematic connectors) match the neighboring cells that share the same boundary. This study assesses the kinematic connectors generated by imposing local density restrictions in the initial design domain (i.e., nucleation) between topologically optimised representative unit-cells. Several kinematic connector examples are presented for two representatives unit-cells topology optimised for maximum bulk and shear moduli with different volume fractions restrictions and graduated Young’s modulus. Experimental mechanical tests (compression) were performed, and comparison studies were carried out between experimental and numerical Young’s modulus. The results for the single maximum bulk for the mean values for experimental compressive Young’s modulus ([Formula: see text]) with 60 [Formula: see text] show a deviation of [Formula: see text]. The single maximum shear for the experimental compressive Young’s modulus mean values ([Formula: see text]) with 60 [Formula: see text] , exhibit a deviation of [Formula: see text]. For graded structures, the experimental mean values of compressive Young’s moduli ([Formula: see text]), compared with predicted total Young’s moduli ([Formula: see text]), show a deviation of [Formula: see text] for the bulk graded structure. The main results show that the single type representative unit-cell experimental Young’s modulus with higher volume fraction presents a minor deviation compared with homogenized data. Both (i.e., bulk and shear moduli) graded microstructures show continuity between adjacent cells. The proposed method proved to be suitable for generating kinematic connections for the design of shear and bulk graduated microstructured materials.
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spelling pubmed-81255662021-05-17 Design of Kinematic Connectors for Microstructured Materials Produced by Additive Manufacturing Silva, Miguel R. Dias-de-Oliveira, João A. Pereira, António M. Alves, Nuno M. Sampaio, Álvaro M. Pontes, António J. Polymers (Basel) Article The main characteristic of materials with a functional gradient is the progressive composition or the structure variation across its geometry. This results in the properties variation in one or more specific directions, according to the functional application requirements. Cellular structure flexibility in tailoring properties is employed frequently to design functionally-graded materials. Topology optimisation methods are powerful tools to functionally graded materials design with cellular structure geometry, although continuity between adjacent unit-cells in gradient directions remains a restriction. It is mandatory to attain a manufacturable part to guarantee the connectedness between adjoining microstructures, namely by ensuring that the solid regions on the microstructure’s borders i.e., kinematic connectors) match the neighboring cells that share the same boundary. This study assesses the kinematic connectors generated by imposing local density restrictions in the initial design domain (i.e., nucleation) between topologically optimised representative unit-cells. Several kinematic connector examples are presented for two representatives unit-cells topology optimised for maximum bulk and shear moduli with different volume fractions restrictions and graduated Young’s modulus. Experimental mechanical tests (compression) were performed, and comparison studies were carried out between experimental and numerical Young’s modulus. The results for the single maximum bulk for the mean values for experimental compressive Young’s modulus ([Formula: see text]) with 60 [Formula: see text] show a deviation of [Formula: see text]. The single maximum shear for the experimental compressive Young’s modulus mean values ([Formula: see text]) with 60 [Formula: see text] , exhibit a deviation of [Formula: see text]. For graded structures, the experimental mean values of compressive Young’s moduli ([Formula: see text]), compared with predicted total Young’s moduli ([Formula: see text]), show a deviation of [Formula: see text] for the bulk graded structure. The main results show that the single type representative unit-cell experimental Young’s modulus with higher volume fraction presents a minor deviation compared with homogenized data. Both (i.e., bulk and shear moduli) graded microstructures show continuity between adjacent cells. The proposed method proved to be suitable for generating kinematic connections for the design of shear and bulk graduated microstructured materials. MDPI 2021-05-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8125566/ /pubmed/34066642 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym13091500 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Silva, Miguel R.
Dias-de-Oliveira, João A.
Pereira, António M.
Alves, Nuno M.
Sampaio, Álvaro M.
Pontes, António J.
Design of Kinematic Connectors for Microstructured Materials Produced by Additive Manufacturing
title Design of Kinematic Connectors for Microstructured Materials Produced by Additive Manufacturing
title_full Design of Kinematic Connectors for Microstructured Materials Produced by Additive Manufacturing
title_fullStr Design of Kinematic Connectors for Microstructured Materials Produced by Additive Manufacturing
title_full_unstemmed Design of Kinematic Connectors for Microstructured Materials Produced by Additive Manufacturing
title_short Design of Kinematic Connectors for Microstructured Materials Produced by Additive Manufacturing
title_sort design of kinematic connectors for microstructured materials produced by additive manufacturing
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8125566/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34066642
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym13091500
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