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Journal ArticleDOI

Thermo-mechanical bending of architected functionally graded cellular beams

H. Niknam, +1 more
- 01 Oct 2019 - 
- Vol. 174, pp 107060
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TLDR
In this article, the effect of cell architecture on the bending behavior of architected cellular beams subjected to a thermo-mechanical load is investigated, and numerical results demonstrate that tailoring relative density through the thickness of an FGC beam can reduce the lateral deflection of lightweight beams to less than half; consequently, tuning the flexural stiffness of cellular structures without changing their total weight.
Abstract
This article investigates the effect of cell architecture on the bending behavior of architected cellular beams subjected to a thermo-mechanical load. The architected functionally graded cellular (FGC) beam is made of porous cells whose properties vary across the thickness or length of the beam. The FGC beam is modeled according to Reddy's third-order shear deformation theory (TSDT), and the effective thermo-mechanical properties are obtained by standard mechanics homogenization. The governing equations are solved by a finite element method, and deflection curves are presented for the architected cellular beams with relative density gradients, subjected to thermal and mechanical loads. Numerical results demonstrate that tailoring relative density through the thickness of an FGC beam can reduce the lateral deflection of lightweight beams to less than half; consequently, tuning the flexural stiffness of cellular structures without changing their total weight. Interestingly, numerical results reveal that the flexural deformation of an FGC beam subjected to a thermo-mechanical load can be controlled by means of the variation function of cell architectures. We also present the optimized architectural variation and cell topologies leading to the least flexible architected cellular beams for alternative thermo-mechanical loading conditions. This paper sheds light on the application of cellular-based mechanical metamaterials for programming the multifunctional behavior of lightweight meta-structures.

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Citations
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Selective laser melting of TiN nanoparticle-reinforced AlSi10Mg composite: Microstructural, interfacial, and mechanical properties

TL;DR: In this article, a novel ultrasonic vibration dispersion technique was used to produce a reinforced AlSi10Mg composite powder, which was fabricated via selective laser melting (SLM) and the effects of scanning speed on the microstructure, particle distribution state and tribological properties of the as-built composites were studied.
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Graded lattice structures: Simultaneous enhancement in stiffness and energy absorption

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of variation of relative density across the lattice structures 3D printed by stereolithography was investigated and the experimental compression test results and numerical data obtained by finite element analysis showed that a uniform design with even distribution of relative densities yields the highest initial stiffness among all 3D-printed architected lattices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flexural response of 3D printed sandwich composite

TL;DR: In this article, the defect-free syntactic foam core sandwich composites are 3D printed all at once (skin-core-skin printing in sequence at once) using optimized printing parameters and characterized for the flexural behavior.
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Engineered Porous Borophene with Tunable Anisotropic Properties

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of porosity and pore topology on the anisotropic properties of monolayer borophene has been analyzed using a finite element approach.
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 Heat Transfer

TL;DR: In this article, the physical concepts and methodologies of heat and mass transfer are explained for advanced undergraduate engineering majors, using a systematic method for problem solving and discusses the relationship of heat transfer to many important practical applications through examples and problems.
Book

An Introduction to the Finite Element Method

J. N. Reddy
TL;DR: Second-order Differential Equations in One Dimension: Finite Element Models (FEM) as discussed by the authors is a generalization of the second-order differential equation in two dimensions.
Journal ArticleDOI

LXVI. On the correction for shear of the differential equation for transverse vibrations of prismatic bars

TL;DR: In this article, the correction for shear of the differential equation for transverse vibrations of prismatic bars is discussed, where the correction is based on the correction of the transverse vibration of a prismatic bar.
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