论文标题
多材料3D印刷软硬界面的生物启发的合理设计
Bioinspired rational design of multi-material 3D printed soft-hard interfaces
论文作者
论文摘要
硬质和软材料的持久接口是由随之而来的应力浓度引起的重大设计挑战。在自然界中,软硬界面表现出显着的机械性能,界面上很少发生故障,但在硬或软材料中。这种出色的性能在机械上与诸如层次结构,多种类型的互锁和功能梯度等设计特征相关。在这里,我们模仿了这些策略,以使用基于体素的多材料3D打印来设计有效的软硬界面。我们设计了几种具有界面功能梯度和各种生物启发的互锁机制的软性界面。几何设计基于三倍的周期性最小表面(即Octo,钻石和甲状腺),类似胶原蛋白的三螺旋和随机分布的颗粒。我们利用有限元方法和实验技术的组合,包括单轴拉伸测试,四圈剪切测试和使用数字图像相关性的全场应变测量,以表征不同组的机械性能。对最佳性能设计的分析(即,能,胶原蛋白和粒子设计)表明,平滑的互连接,兼容的梯度过渡以及降低或降低硬性和软相之间的应变浓度区域导致了同时强大和坚固的接口。仅当所产生的界面几何形状降低应变浓度(例如,在胶原蛋白和颗粒中)时,增加梯度长度才有益。与对照组相比,将基于能力的结构与颗粒的随机分布相结合,产生了表现最佳的软性界面,强度接近了可能的强度的上限,并且与对照组相比,强度高达50%。
Durable interfacing of hard and soft materials is a major design challenge caused by the ensuing stress concentrations. In nature, soft-hard interfaces exhibit remarkable mechanical performance, with failures rarely happening at the interface but in the hard or soft material. This superior performance is mechanistically linked to such design features as hierarchical structures, multiple types of interlocking, and functional gradients. Here, we mimic these strategies to design efficient soft-hard interfaces using voxel-based multi-material 3D printing. We designed several types of soft-hard interfaces with interfacial functional gradients and various types of bio-inspired interlocking mechanisms. The geometrical designs were based on triply periodic minimal surfaces (i.e., octo, diamond, and gyroid), collagen-like triple helices, and randomly distributed particles. We utilized a combination of the finite element method and experimental techniques, including uniaxial tensile tests, quad-lap shear tests, and full-field strain measurement using digital image correlation, to characterize the mechanical performance of different groups. The analysis of the best performing designs (i.e., the gyroid, collagen, and particle designs) suggests that smooth interdigitated connections, compliant gradient transitions, and either decreasing or constraining the strain concentrations regions between the hard and soft phases led to simultaneously strong and tough interfaces. Increasing the gradient length was only beneficial when the resulting interface geometry reduced strain concentrations (e.g., in collagen and particles). Combining the gyroid-based architecture with a random distribution of particles yielded the best-performing soft-hard interface, with strengths approaching the upper limit of the possible strengths and up to 50% toughness enhancement as compared to the control group.