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Journal ArticleDOI

Fabrication and deformation of three-dimensional hollow ceramic nanostructures

TLDR
The fabrication of hollow ceramic scaffolds that mimic the length scales and hierarchy of biological materials are reported, suggesting that the hierarchical design principles offered by hard biological organisms can be applied to create damage-tolerant lightweight engineering materials.
Abstract
Creating lightweight, mechanically robust materials has long been an engineering pursuit. Many siliceous skeleton species— such as diatoms, sea sponges and radiolarians—have remarkably high strengths when compared with man-made materials of the same composition, yet are able to remain lightweight and porous1–7. It has been suggested that these properties arise from the hierarchical arrangement of different structural elements at their relevant length scales8,9. Here, we report the fabrication of hollow ceramic scaffolds that mimic the length scales and hierarchy of biological materials. The constituent solids attain tensile strengths of 1.75 GPa without failure even after multiple deformation cycles, as revealed by in situ nanomechanical experiments and finite-element analysis. We discuss the high strength and lack of failure in terms of stress concentrators at surface imperfections and of local stresses within the microstructural landscape. Our findings suggest that the hierarchical design principles offered by hard biological organisms can be applied to create damage-tolerant lightweight engineering materials.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

New paradigms in cellular material design and fabrication

TL;DR: In this paper, a hybrid method based on the volumetric distance field (VDF) and triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS) cellular topology is proposed to design 3D cellular materials with intricate internal microstructures and arbitrarily-shaped external surfaces.
Journal ArticleDOI

An integrated approach for probing the structure and mechanical properties of diatoms: Toward engineered nanotemplates.

TL;DR: A combined experimental-simulation method was developed to probe the porous structure and mechanical behavior of two distinct marine diatom species, Coscinodiscus sp.
Journal ArticleDOI

A level-set shape metamorphosis with mechanical constraints for geometrically graded microstructures

TL;DR: A stiffness-based constraint is proposed to eliminate potential breakage or shrinkages in generating the intermediate shapes, which are used to build a transition zone for the two shapes to be connected and demonstrate that the optimal functionality is not compromised significantly.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hollow medium-entropy alloy nanolattices with ultrahigh energy absorption and resilience

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report the development of hollow CoCrNi medium-entropy alloy (MEA) nanolattices, which exhibit high specific energy absorption (up to 25'J'g−1) and resilience (over 90% recoverability) by leveraging size-induced ductility and rationally engineered MEA microstructural defects.
References
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Book

Cellular Solids: Structure and Properties

TL;DR: The linear elasticity of anisotropic cellular solids is studied in this article. But the authors focus on the design of sandwich panels with foam cores and do not consider the properties of the materials.
Book

Introduction to Ceramics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a model for the development of the MICROSTRUCTURE in CERAMICS based on phase transformation, glass formation and glass-Ceramics.
MonographDOI

Mechanical Behavior of Materials

TL;DR: A balanced mechanics-materials approach and coverage of the latest developments in biomaterials and electronic materials, the new edition of this popular text is the most thorough and modern book available for upper-level undergraduate courses on the mechanical behavior of materials as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

THE MATERIAL BONE: Structure-Mechanical Function Relations

TL;DR: The structure-mechanical relations at each of the hierarchical levels of organization are reviewed, highlighting wherever possible both underlying strategies and gaps in the authors' knowledge.
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