Architected cellular materials: A review on their mechanical properties towards fatigue-tolerant design and fabrication
Matteo Benedetti,A. du Plessis,A. du Plessis,Robert O. Ritchie,M. Dallago,Seyed Mohammad Javad Razavi,Filippo Berto +6 more
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the progress to date in the improvement of the fatigue performance of cellular structures manufactured by additive manufacturing, especially metal-based, providing insights and a glimpse to the future for fatigue-tolerant additively manufactured architected cellular materials.
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Abstract: Additive manufacturing of industrially-relevant high-performance parts and products is today a reality, especially for metal additive manufacturing technologies. The design complexity that is now possible makes it particularly useful to improve product performance in a variety of applications. Metal additive manufacturing is especially well matured and is being used for production of end-use mission-critical parts. The next level of this development includes the use of intentionally designed porous metals - architected cellular or lattice structures. Cellular structures can be designed or tailored for specific mechanical or other performance characteristics and have numerous advantages due to their large surface area, low mass, regular repeated structure and open interconnected pore spaces. This is considered particularly useful for medical implants and for lightweight automotive and aerospace components, which are the main industry drivers at present. Architected cellular structures behave similar to open cell foams, which have found many other industrial applications to date, such as sandwich panels for impact absorption, radiators for thermal management, filters or catalyst materials, sound insulation, amongst others. The advantage of additively manufactured cellular structures is the precise control of the micro-architecture which becomes possible. The huge potential of these porous architected cellular materials manufactured by additive manufacturing is currently limited by concerns over their structural integrity. This is a valid concern, when considering the complexity of the manufacturing process, and the only recent maturation of metal additive manufacturing technologies. Many potential manufacturing errors can occur, which have so far resulted in a widely disparate set of results in the literature for these types of structures, with especially poor fatigue properties often found. These have improved over the years, matching the maturation and improvement of the metal additive manufacturing processes. As the causes of errors and effects of these on mechanical properties are now better understood, many of the underlying issues can be removed or mitigated. This makes additively manufactured cellular structures a highly valid option for disruptive new and improved industrial products. This review paper discusses the progress to date in the improvement of the fatigue performance of cellular structures manufactured by additive manufacturing, especially metal-based, providing insights and a glimpse to the future for fatigue-tolerant additively manufactured architected cellular materials.
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Citations
Response of an aluminium Schwarz triply periodic minimal surface lattice structure under constant amplitude and random fatigue
TL;DR: In this paper , an investigation about fatigue behavior of an aluminium triply periodic minimal surface lattice structures, printed with Selective Laser Melting (SLM), is presented. But the results are limited to a single lattice structure.
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Experimental and numerical characterization of imperfect additively manufactured lattices based on triply periodic minimal surfaces
Fabian Günther,Stefan Pilz,Franz Hirsch,Markus Wagner,Markus Kästner,Annett Gebert,Martina Zimmermann +6 more
- 01 Aug 2023
TL;DR: This study experimentally and numerically investigates the structure-property relationships of imperfect additively manufactured lattices based on triply periodic minimal surfaces, highlighting the impact of process-related imperfections on mechanical performance and proposing a reconstruction procedure for finite element analysis.
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Optimization of mechanical properties of Ti–6Al–4V triply periodic minimal surface porous structures prepared by laser beam powder bed fusion technology based on orientation control
Wentian Shi,Yuxiang Lin,Jian Li,Minghui Yang,Bo Liu +4 more
TL;DR: This study optimizes mechanical properties of Ti-6Al-4V TPMS porous structures by controlling unit cell orientation, demonstrating improved performance and predictable failure behavior through quasi-static compression tests and fracture surface analysis.
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Design of porous structure based on the Voronoi diagram and stress line for better stress shielding relief and permeability
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TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a new design method of the variable porosity porous structure based on the stress line and Voronoi diagram, and the designed samples were fabricated through laser powder bed fusion (L-PBF) technology with TC4 powders.
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Mechanical Properties of AISI 316L Lattice Structures via Laser Powder Bed Fusion as a Function of Unit Cell Features
Luis H. Olivas-Alanis,Antonio Abraham Fraga-Martínez,Erika García-López,Omar Lopez-Botello,Elisa Vazquez-Lepe,Enrique Cuan-Urquizo,Ciro A Rodríguez +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors studied the mechanical behavior of stainless-steel (AISI 316L) lattice structures both experimentally and computationally, and collected computational and experimental data for tuning the mechanical properties of lattice structure by changing the geometry, size, and orientation of the unit cell.
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