1. Design and Additive Manufacture of Functionally Graded Structures based on Digital Materials
- Author
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Iñigo Flores Ituarte, Martin L. Dunn, Vahid Hassani, David W. Rosen, and Narasimha Boddeti
- Subjects
0209 industrial biotechnology ,Fabrication ,Materials science ,Biomedical Engineering ,Process (computing) ,Modulus ,Experimental data ,Mechanical engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Material Design ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Functionally graded material ,sub_finiteanalysis ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Workflow ,General Materials Science ,Electronic design automation ,sub_mechanicalengineering ,0210 nano-technology ,Engineering (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Voxel-based multimaterial jetting additive manufacturing allows fabrication of digital materials (DMs) at the meso-scale (∼1 mm) by controlling the deposition patterns of soft elastomeric and rigid glassy polymers at the voxel-scale (∼90 μm). The digital materials can then be used to create heterogeneous functionally graded material (FGM) structures at the macro-scale (∼10 mm) programmed to behave in a predefined manner. This offers huge potential for design and fabrication of novel and complex bespoke mechanical structures.\ud \ud This paper presents a complete design and manufacturing workflow that simultaneously integrates material design, structural design, and product fabrication of FGM structures based on digital materials. This is enabled by a regression analysis of the experimental data on mechanical performance of the DMs i.e., Young’s modulus, tensile strength and elongation at break. This allows us to express the material behavior simply as a function of the microstructural descriptors (in this case, just volume fraction) without having to understand the underlying microstructural mechanics while simultaneously connecting it to the process parameters.\ud \ud Our proposed design and manufacturing approach is then demonstrated and validated in two series of design exercises to devise complex FGM structures. First, we design, computationally predict and experimentally validate the behavior of prescribed designs of FGM tensile structures with different material gradients. Second, we present a design automation approach for optimal FGM structures. The comparison between the simulations and the experiments with the FGM structures shows that the presented design and fabrication workflow based on our modeling approach for DMs at meso-scale can be effectively used to design and predict the performance of FGMs at macro-scale.
- Published
- 2019