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contributor authorKeyhani, Amirreza
contributor authorZhou, Min
date accessioned2022-02-04T22:05:54Z
date available2022-02-04T22:05:54Z
date copyright9/2/2020 12:00:00 AM
date issued2020
identifier issn0021-8936
identifier otherjam_87_11_111005.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4274867
description abstractThe thermo-mechanical response of an additively manufactured photopolymer-particulate composite under conditions of macroscopic uniaxial compression without lateral confinement at overall strain rates of 400–2000 s−1 is studied. The material has a direct-ink-written unidirectional structure. Computations are performed to quantify the effects of microstructure attributes including anisotropy, defects, and filament size on localized deformation, energy dissipations, and temperature rises. To this effect, an experimentally informed Lagrangian finite element framework is used, accounting for finite-strain elastic–plastic deformation, strain-rate effect, failure initiation and propagation, post-failure internal contact and friction, heat generation due to friction and inelastic bulk deformation, and heat conduction. The analysis focuses on the material behavior under overall compression. Despite relatively low contribution to overall heating, friction is localized at fracture sites and plays an essential role in the development of local temperature spikes unknown as hotspots. The microstructural attributes are found to significantly affect the development of the hotspots, with local heating most pronounced when loading is transverse to the filaments or when the material has higher porosities, stronger inter-filament junctions, or smaller filament sizes. Samples with smaller filament sizes undergo more damage, exhibit higher frictional dissipation, and develop larger hotspots that occur primarily at failure sites.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleEffect of Structure on Response of a Three-Dimensional-Printed Photopolymer-Particulate Composite Under Intermediate Strain Rate Loading
typeJournal Paper
journal volume87
journal issue11
journal titleJournal of Applied Mechanics
identifier doi10.1115/1.4048050
journal fristpage0111008-1
journal lastpage0111008-12
page12
treeJournal of Applied Mechanics:;2020:;volume( 087 ):;issue: 011
contenttypeFulltext


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