Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy

This thesis establishes advanced theoretical-computational techniques to understand and predict the mechanical properties of structural lattice metamaterials with a focus on the effective elastic properties. First, attention is devoted to the effective stiffness of hierarchical nanolattices, which d...

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Main Author: Zelhofer, Alex James
Format: Others
Published: 2017
Online Access:https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/10268/1/SubmittedThesis.pdf
Zelhofer, Alex James (2017) Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/Z91G0J90. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:06042017-210215990 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:06042017-210215990>
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spelling ndltd-CALTECH-oai-thesis.library.caltech.edu-102682019-10-05T03:04:37Z Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy Zelhofer, Alex James This thesis establishes advanced theoretical-computational techniques to understand and predict the mechanical properties of structural lattice metamaterials with a focus on the effective elastic properties. First, attention is devoted to the effective stiffness of hierarchical nanolattices, which depends on lattice topology, architecture, and inherent geometric imperfections. A computational substructuring technique is applied to predict the mechanics of hierarchical truss networks containing thousands to millions of truss members, with each solid, hollow-tube, or composite truss member requiring full-detail 3D resolution. By applying this methodology to hierarchical nanolattices structural hierarchy is shown to span several decades of relative density and effective stiffness with near-ideal effective stiffness scaling. Comparisons between experimental data and model predictions show convincing agreement and highlight the lattice sensitivity to fabrication-induced geometric imperfection. Second, elastic stress wave propagation in structural lattices is investigated with a focus on wave beaming (i.e., directional energy flow) under harmonic mechanical excitation. A new technique is introduced to obtain pseudo-continuous maps of group velocity magnitude vs. propagation direction vs. frequency to predict directional wave propagation, demonstrating traditional beaming prediction techniques are insufficient for many scenarios. The method is applied to two-dimensional structural lattices to predict directional energy flow. Predictions are verified by comparison to explicit dynamic simulations showing the limitations of the classical dispersion relation method. Overall, improved computational techniques are presented to better described, understand, predict and optimize the elastic behavior of truss lattices. 2017 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/10268/1/SubmittedThesis.pdf https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:06042017-210215990 Zelhofer, Alex James (2017) Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/Z91G0J90. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:06042017-210215990 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:06042017-210215990> https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/10268/
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sources NDLTD
description This thesis establishes advanced theoretical-computational techniques to understand and predict the mechanical properties of structural lattice metamaterials with a focus on the effective elastic properties. First, attention is devoted to the effective stiffness of hierarchical nanolattices, which depends on lattice topology, architecture, and inherent geometric imperfections. A computational substructuring technique is applied to predict the mechanics of hierarchical truss networks containing thousands to millions of truss members, with each solid, hollow-tube, or composite truss member requiring full-detail 3D resolution. By applying this methodology to hierarchical nanolattices structural hierarchy is shown to span several decades of relative density and effective stiffness with near-ideal effective stiffness scaling. Comparisons between experimental data and model predictions show convincing agreement and highlight the lattice sensitivity to fabrication-induced geometric imperfection. Second, elastic stress wave propagation in structural lattices is investigated with a focus on wave beaming (i.e., directional energy flow) under harmonic mechanical excitation. A new technique is introduced to obtain pseudo-continuous maps of group velocity magnitude vs. propagation direction vs. frequency to predict directional wave propagation, demonstrating traditional beaming prediction techniques are insufficient for many scenarios. The method is applied to two-dimensional structural lattices to predict directional energy flow. Predictions are verified by comparison to explicit dynamic simulations showing the limitations of the classical dispersion relation method. Overall, improved computational techniques are presented to better described, understand, predict and optimize the elastic behavior of truss lattices.
author Zelhofer, Alex James
spellingShingle Zelhofer, Alex James
Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy
author_facet Zelhofer, Alex James
author_sort Zelhofer, Alex James
title Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy
title_short Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy
title_full Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy
title_fullStr Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy
title_full_unstemmed Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy
title_sort computational modeling of the mechanics of elastic structural lattices: effects of lattice architecture and hierarchy
publishDate 2017
url https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/10268/1/SubmittedThesis.pdf
Zelhofer, Alex James (2017) Computational Modeling of the Mechanics of Elastic Structural Lattices: Effects of Lattice Architecture and Hierarchy. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/Z91G0J90. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:06042017-210215990 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:06042017-210215990>
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