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Nonlinear Multi-Scale Modelling, Simulation and Validation of 3D Knitted Textiles

Authors :
Sai-Kit Yeung
Ying Yi Tan
Oliver Weeger
Yu Han Quek
Tat Lin Lee
Sawako Kaijima
Martin L. Dunn
Amir Hosein Sakhaei
Source :
Applied Composite Materials. 25:797-810
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2018.

Abstract

Three-dimensionally (3D) knitted technical textiles are spreading into industrial applications, since their geometric, structural and functional performance can be tailored and optimized on fibre-, yarn- and fabric levels by customizing yarn materials, knit patterns and geometric shapes. The ability to simulate their complex mechanical behaviour is thus an essential ingredient in the development of a digital workflow for optimal design and manufacture of 3D knitted textiles. Here, we present a multi-scale modelling and simulation framework for the prediction of the nonlinear orthotropic mechanical behaviour of single jersey knitted textiles and its experimental validation. On the meso-scale, representative volume elements (RVEs) of the fabric are modelled as single, interlocked yarn loops and their mechanical deformation behaviour is homogenized using periodic boundary conditions. Yarns are modelled as nonlinear 3D beam elements and numerically discretized using an isogeometric collocation method, where a frictional contact formulation is used to model inter-yarn interactions. On the macro-scale, fabrics are modelled as membrane elements with nonlinear orthotropic material behaviour, which is parameterized by a response surface constitutive model obtained from the meso-scale homogenization. The input parameters of the yarn-level simulation, i.e., mechanical properties of yarns and geometric dimensions of yarn loops in the fabrics, are determined experimentally and subsequent meso- and macro-scale simulation results are evaluated against reference results and mechanical tests of knitted fabric samples. Good agreement between computational predictions and experimental results is achieved for samples with varying stitch values, thus validating our novel computational approach combining efficient meso-scale simulation using 3D beam modelling of yarns with numerical homogenization and nonlinear orthotropic response surface constitutive modelling on the macro-scale.

Details

ISSN :
15734897 and 0929189X
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied Composite Materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a9b4967f4941a69c463d6f91aa86d017
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10443-018-9702-4