A novel layered topology of auxetic materials based on the tetrachiral honeycomb microstructure

Microstructured honeycomb materials may exhibit exotic, extreme and tailorable mechanical properties, suited for innovative technological applications in a variety of modern engineering fields. The paper is focused on analysing the directional auxeticity of tetrachiral materials, through analytical,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ferdinando Auricchio, Andrea Bacigalupo, Luigi Gambarotta, Marco Lepidi, Simone Morganti, Francesca Vadalà
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-10-01
Series:Materials & Design
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264127519303211
Description
Summary:Microstructured honeycomb materials may exhibit exotic, extreme and tailorable mechanical properties, suited for innovative technological applications in a variety of modern engineering fields. The paper is focused on analysing the directional auxeticity of tetrachiral materials, through analytical, numerical and experimental methods. Theoretical predictions about the global elastic properties have been successfully validated by performing tensile laboratory tests on tetrachiral samples, realized with high precision 3D printing technologies. Inspired by the kinematic behaviour of the tetrachiral material, a newly-design bi-layered topology, referred to as bi-tetrachiral material, has been theoretically conceived and mechanically modelled. The novel topology virtuously exploits the mutual collaboration between two tetrachiral layers with opposite chiralities. The bi-tetrachiral material has been verified to outperform the tetrachiral material in terms of global Young modulus and, as major achievement, to exhibit a remarkable auxetic behaviour. Specifically, experimental results, confirmed by parametric analytical and computational analyses, have highlighted the effective possibility to attain strongly negative Poisson ratios, identified as a peculiar global elastic property of the novel bi-layered topology. Keywords: Elastic properties, Experimental tests, Additive manufacturing, Finite element analysis, Beam lattice, Bi-tetrachiral material
ISSN:0264-1275