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Ultra-low-density digitally architected carbon with a strutted tube-in-tube structure
- Source :
- Nature Materials, 20(11), 1498-1505. Nature Publishing Group
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Porous materials with engineered stretching-dominated lattice designs, which offer attractive mechanical properties with ultra-light weight and large surface area for wide-ranging applications, have recently achieved near-ideal linear scaling between stiffness and density. Here, rather than optimizing the microlattice topology, we explore a different approach to strengthen low-density structural materials by designing tube-in-tube beam structures. We develop a process to transform fully dense, three-dimensional printed polymeric beams into graphitic carbon hollow tube-in-tube sandwich morphologies, where, similar to grass stems, the inner and outer tubes are connected through a network of struts. Compression tests and computational modelling show that this change in beam morphology dramatically slows down the decrease in stiffness with decreasing density. In situ pillar compression experiments further demonstrate large deformation recovery after 30–50% compression and high specific damping merit index. Our strutted tube-in-tube design opens up the space and realizes highly desirable high modulus–low density and high modulus–high damping material structures. A nanoscale tube-in-tube sandwich structure is generated by a two-step templating-pyrolysis process, which strengthens the log-pile carbon architecture and slows down the decrease of stiffness with decreasing density.
- Subjects :
- Structural material
Materials science
Mechanical Engineering
chemistry.chemical_element
Stiffness
Topology (electrical circuits)
General Chemistry
Condensed Matter Physics
Compression (physics)
chemistry
Mechanics of Materials
medicine
General Materials Science
Composite material
medicine.symptom
Porous medium
Nanoscopic scale
Carbon
Beam (structure)
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 14761122
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nature Materials, 20(11), 1498-1505. Nature Publishing Group
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....20e3f7fd171b106231de481a268db897