Mechanical anisotropy of 3D-printed digital materials at large strains

Abstract

3D-printed digital materials whose mechanical behavior travels between those from thermoplastic to rubbery polymers have become increasingly important. However, their mechanical functionalities have not been fully exploited due to intrinsic mechanical anisotropy resulting from microstructural heterogeneity. Here, we combine mechanical testing, microscopy analysis and micromechanical modeling for a comprehensive understanding of complex deformation mechanisms responsible for the printingorientation-dependent nonlinear mechanical behavior of digital materials at small to large strains. Towards this end, we construct representative volume elements that account for highly anisotropic microstructural features resulting from the printing-orientation-dependent diffusion and mixing between photocurable base resins. We then demonstrate, through micromechanical analysis, that stable compressive deformation of well-aligned elliptical hard thermoplastic inclusions embedded within the surrounding soft rubbery matrix gives rise to initial elastic anisotropy. Our experimental and micromechanical modeling results also show that the interplay between buckling instability and plastic deformation of the high-aspect-ratio hard domains governs mechanical anisotropy at large strains as well as the printing-orientation-dependent resilience and energy dissipation capabilities in these digital materials.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Jan 2026
Accepted
10 Jun 2026
First published
15 Jun 2026

Soft Matter, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Mechanical anisotropy of 3D-printed digital materials at large strains

S. Lee, G. Lee, S. Yun, S. Lee, J. Lee and H. Cho, Soft Matter, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6SM00036C

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