Fracture of 3D printed brittle open-cell structures under compression

We investigated the fracture behavior under compression of well-arranged open-cell structured and notched specimens, all made of brittle plastic and fabricated by 3D printing. The basic material properties were studied by using bulk plastic specimens, the basic properties of cellular-structured spec...

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Main Authors: Lihi Shenhav, Dov Sherman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-11-01
Series:Materials & Design
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264127519305398
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spelling doaj-7e90284cce8d47c6b848dd60df32ed242020-11-25T01:17:50ZengElsevierMaterials & Design0264-12752019-11-01182Fracture of 3D printed brittle open-cell structures under compressionLihi Shenhav0Dov Sherman1School of Mechanical Engineering, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv 69978, IsraelCorresponding author.; School of Mechanical Engineering, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv 69978, IsraelWe investigated the fracture behavior under compression of well-arranged open-cell structured and notched specimens, all made of brittle plastic and fabricated by 3D printing. The basic material properties were studied by using bulk plastic specimens, the basic properties of cellular-structured specimens by cubic and tetragonal specimens under compression. Notched strip-like specimens were subjected to compressive displacement aimed to study the fracture behavior. The notched specimens were loaded until the columns adjacent to the notch tip collapsed stably by buckling mechanisms, followed by a rapid and unstable sequential collapse mechanisms of the specimens' columns to a point of failure and load drop. The well-arranged open-cell structured specimens enabled an adequate repeatability of the mechanical properties for valuable analyses and conclusions.We evaluated the property that predicts unstable collapse mechanisms of the cellular cell specimens under compression, G˜IC, by using 3 different approaches: macroscopic and homogenized strip-like specimen using finite element analysis (FEA), J-Integral along the outer surfaces of the specimens, and the energy at the near-tip columns evaluated by digital image correlation (DIC). Most importantly, it is shown that G˜IC is not a material property, but is rather dictated by the collapse mechanisms of the columns at the notch tip under Euler buckling. Keywords: Cellular structure, 3D printing, Brittle plastic, Fracture, Compression, Bucklinghttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264127519305398
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lihi Shenhav
Dov Sherman
spellingShingle Lihi Shenhav
Dov Sherman
Fracture of 3D printed brittle open-cell structures under compression
Materials & Design
author_facet Lihi Shenhav
Dov Sherman
author_sort Lihi Shenhav
title Fracture of 3D printed brittle open-cell structures under compression
title_short Fracture of 3D printed brittle open-cell structures under compression
title_full Fracture of 3D printed brittle open-cell structures under compression
title_fullStr Fracture of 3D printed brittle open-cell structures under compression
title_full_unstemmed Fracture of 3D printed brittle open-cell structures under compression
title_sort fracture of 3d printed brittle open-cell structures under compression
publisher Elsevier
series Materials & Design
issn 0264-1275
publishDate 2019-11-01
description We investigated the fracture behavior under compression of well-arranged open-cell structured and notched specimens, all made of brittle plastic and fabricated by 3D printing. The basic material properties were studied by using bulk plastic specimens, the basic properties of cellular-structured specimens by cubic and tetragonal specimens under compression. Notched strip-like specimens were subjected to compressive displacement aimed to study the fracture behavior. The notched specimens were loaded until the columns adjacent to the notch tip collapsed stably by buckling mechanisms, followed by a rapid and unstable sequential collapse mechanisms of the specimens' columns to a point of failure and load drop. The well-arranged open-cell structured specimens enabled an adequate repeatability of the mechanical properties for valuable analyses and conclusions.We evaluated the property that predicts unstable collapse mechanisms of the cellular cell specimens under compression, G˜IC, by using 3 different approaches: macroscopic and homogenized strip-like specimen using finite element analysis (FEA), J-Integral along the outer surfaces of the specimens, and the energy at the near-tip columns evaluated by digital image correlation (DIC). Most importantly, it is shown that G˜IC is not a material property, but is rather dictated by the collapse mechanisms of the columns at the notch tip under Euler buckling. Keywords: Cellular structure, 3D printing, Brittle plastic, Fracture, Compression, Buckling
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264127519305398
work_keys_str_mv AT lihishenhav fractureof3dprintedbrittleopencellstructuresundercompression
AT dovsherman fractureof3dprintedbrittleopencellstructuresundercompression
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