Experimental investigation and modeling of the temperature memory effect in a 4D-printed auxetic structure
Author(s): |
Chiara Pasini
Nicoletta Inverardi Davide Battini Giulia Scalet Stefania Marconi Ferdinando Auricchio Stefano Pandini |
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Medium: | journal article |
Language(s): | English |
Published in: | Smart Materials and Structures, 7 July 2022, n. 9, v. 31 |
Page(s): | 095021 |
DOI: | 10.1088/1361-665x/ac8031 |
Abstract: |
4D printing is an innovative manufacturing approach that combines 3D printing and stimuli- responsive abilities to produce objects with complex geometry and capable of shapeshifting over time (the fourth dimension). To pursue such an approach this paper proposes to develop re-entrant honeycomb auxetic grids with tunable shape reconfigurable behavior. Particularly, the work combines 3D printing and a photopolymer exhibiting the so-called temperature memory effect (TME), a peculiar shape memory behavior expressing the capability of the material to remember not only the original shape but also the deformation temperature. A thorough experimental activity was carried out on single auxetic unit cells, chosen as representative of the whole auxetic grid, to properly highlight and assess their response upon heating after single-step and multiple-step deformation histories and to describe the recovery process as a function of time and temperature. Results demonstrate the possibility to achieve an easily controlled TME and to successfully exploit it for autonomous, complex hierarchical transformations over a large range of temperatures. As a proof-of-concept, the study of the sequential recovery of an entire auxetic grid subjected to double-step programming allowed highlighting a decoupled in-plane elongation and out-of-plane bending. The behavior of the 4D-printed auxetic structures was simulated by means of finite element (FE) analysis, using a thermoviscoelastic model of the photopolymer and viscoelastic experimental data obtained by time-temperature superposition analysis applied to multifrequency dynamic mechanical tests and to isothermal recovery tests. A good correspondence between experiments and simulations was obtained for all shape memory tests, demonstrating that the proposed FE approach is a suitable tool to support the design of these structures. The combination of 3D printing and TME opens new perspectives to achieve dynamic tunability in mechanical metamaterials, that is a key ingredient in several application fields. |
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data sheet - Reference-ID
10685458 - Published on:
13/08/2022 - Last updated on:
13/08/2022