Issue 25, 2014

Modeling and additive manufacturing of bio-inspired composites with tunable fracture mechanical properties

Abstract

Flaws, imperfections and cracks are ubiquitous in material systems and are commonly the catalysts of catastrophic material failure. As stresses and strains tend to concentrate around cracks and imperfections, structures tend to fail far before large regions of material have ever been subjected to significant loading. Therefore, a major challenge in material design is to engineer systems that perform on par with pristine structures despite the presence of imperfections. In this work we integrate knowledge of biological systems with computational modeling and state of the art additive manufacturing to synthesize advanced composites with tunable fracture mechanical properties. Supported by extensive mesoscale computer simulations, we demonstrate the design and manufacturing of composites that exhibit deformation mechanisms characteristic of pristine systems, featuring flaw-tolerant properties. We analyze the results by directly comparing strain fields for the synthesized composites, obtained through digital image correlation (DIC), and the computationally tested composites. Moreover, we plot Ashby diagrams for the range of simulated and experimental composites. Our findings show good agreement between simulation and experiment, confirming that the proposed mechanisms have a significant potential for vastly improving the fracture response of composite materials. We elucidate the role of stiffness ratio variations of composite constituents as an important feature in determining the composite properties. Moreover, our work validates the predictive ability of our models, presenting them as useful tools for guiding further material design. This work enables the tailored design and manufacturing of composites assembled from inferior building blocks, that obtain optimal combinations of stiffness and toughness.

Graphical abstract: Modeling and additive manufacturing of bio-inspired composites with tunable fracture mechanical properties

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Nov 2013
Accepted
10 Mar 2014
First published
10 Mar 2014

Soft Matter, 2014,10, 4436-4442

Modeling and additive manufacturing of bio-inspired composites with tunable fracture mechanical properties

L. S. Dimas and M. J. Buehler, Soft Matter, 2014, 10, 4436 DOI: 10.1039/C3SM52890A

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