Mechanical response of lightweight hollow truss metal oxide lattices

Porous metal oxides are an important class of engineering materials with unique combinations of lightweight, mechanical, photovoltaic, catalytic and thermal properties. The structural stability and load-bearing capabilities of porous metal oxides can be improved if stretch/compression-dominated latt...

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Main Authors: Kanaujia, Pawan Kumar, Muhammad Azkhairy Ramezan, Yap, Xiu Yun, Song, Yujie, Du, Zehui, Gan, Chee Lip, Lam, Yee Cheong, Lai, Chang Quan
Other Authors: School of Materials Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143074
https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/MLBDZA
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1430742021-01-18T04:50:16Z Mechanical response of lightweight hollow truss metal oxide lattices Kanaujia, Pawan Kumar Muhammad Azkhairy Ramezan Yap, Xiu Yun Song, Yujie Du, Zehui Gan, Chee Lip Lam, Yee Cheong Lai, Chang Quan School of Materials Science and Engineering School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Temasek Laboratories Engineering::Mechanical engineering Metal Oxide Ceramic Foam Porous metal oxides are an important class of engineering materials with unique combinations of lightweight, mechanical, photovoltaic, catalytic and thermal properties. The structural stability and load-bearing capabilities of porous metal oxides can be improved if stretch/compression-dominated lattice designs are used instead of bending-dominated foam structures. Here, we introduce a simple, scalable technique that involves the dip-coating of 3D printed polymeric lattices, of simple cubic design, in a metal particle (Fe and Cu) suspension. Subsequent heat treatment in a furnace removed the polymeric core and binder, leaving behind a hollow-truss lattice structure composed of sintered and oxidized metal particles. Examination of its microstructure reveals that the hollow-truss lattices have three levels of hierarchy, namely, the length/ width of the lattice strut (∼1 mm), the thickness of the coating (∼0.1 mm) and the size of the pores/ particles (∼0.01 mm). This hierarchical arrangement of material enabled the hollow-truss metal oxide lattices to achieve ∼1% relative density, which is lower than that achievable with ceramic foams. Under quasi-static compression, the hollow-truss lattices experienced multiple steps of fractures and exhibited highly serrated stress–strain curves. The relative modulus and relative strength of hollow-truss lattices were found to be related to the relative density by a power law relationship, with an exponent of 1.2 and ∼1.3, respectively. A detailed analysis showed that the slight deviation of the mechanical properties from an ideal stretch-dominated design was primarily due to the presence of small amounts of porosity in the metal oxide coating. Nevertheless, the load-bearing efficiency exhibited by the hollow-truss metal oxide lattices was found to be comparable or superior to that of hollow-truss alumina micro- and nano-lattices, as well as ceramic foams. Accepted version 2020-07-28T03:04:57Z 2020-07-28T03:04:57Z 2019 Journal Article Kanaujia, P. K., Muhammad Azkhairy Ramezan, Yap, X. Y., Song, Y., Du, Z., Gan, C. L., ... Lai, C. Q. (2019). Mechanical response of lightweight hollow truss metal oxide lattices. Materialia, 8, 100439-. doi:10.1016/j.mtla.2019.100439 2589-1529 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143074 10.1016/j.mtla.2019.100439 2-s2.0-85071115092 8 en Materialia https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/MLBDZA © 2019 Acta Materialia Inc. All rights reserved. This paper was published by Elsevier Ltd in Materialia and is made available with permission of Acta Materialia Inc. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Metal Oxide
Ceramic Foam
spellingShingle Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Metal Oxide
Ceramic Foam
Kanaujia, Pawan Kumar
Muhammad Azkhairy Ramezan
Yap, Xiu Yun
Song, Yujie
Du, Zehui
Gan, Chee Lip
Lam, Yee Cheong
Lai, Chang Quan
Mechanical response of lightweight hollow truss metal oxide lattices
description Porous metal oxides are an important class of engineering materials with unique combinations of lightweight, mechanical, photovoltaic, catalytic and thermal properties. The structural stability and load-bearing capabilities of porous metal oxides can be improved if stretch/compression-dominated lattice designs are used instead of bending-dominated foam structures. Here, we introduce a simple, scalable technique that involves the dip-coating of 3D printed polymeric lattices, of simple cubic design, in a metal particle (Fe and Cu) suspension. Subsequent heat treatment in a furnace removed the polymeric core and binder, leaving behind a hollow-truss lattice structure composed of sintered and oxidized metal particles. Examination of its microstructure reveals that the hollow-truss lattices have three levels of hierarchy, namely, the length/ width of the lattice strut (∼1 mm), the thickness of the coating (∼0.1 mm) and the size of the pores/ particles (∼0.01 mm). This hierarchical arrangement of material enabled the hollow-truss metal oxide lattices to achieve ∼1% relative density, which is lower than that achievable with ceramic foams. Under quasi-static compression, the hollow-truss lattices experienced multiple steps of fractures and exhibited highly serrated stress–strain curves. The relative modulus and relative strength of hollow-truss lattices were found to be related to the relative density by a power law relationship, with an exponent of 1.2 and ∼1.3, respectively. A detailed analysis showed that the slight deviation of the mechanical properties from an ideal stretch-dominated design was primarily due to the presence of small amounts of porosity in the metal oxide coating. Nevertheless, the load-bearing efficiency exhibited by the hollow-truss metal oxide lattices was found to be comparable or superior to that of hollow-truss alumina micro- and nano-lattices, as well as ceramic foams.
author2 School of Materials Science and Engineering
author_facet School of Materials Science and Engineering
Kanaujia, Pawan Kumar
Muhammad Azkhairy Ramezan
Yap, Xiu Yun
Song, Yujie
Du, Zehui
Gan, Chee Lip
Lam, Yee Cheong
Lai, Chang Quan
format Article
author Kanaujia, Pawan Kumar
Muhammad Azkhairy Ramezan
Yap, Xiu Yun
Song, Yujie
Du, Zehui
Gan, Chee Lip
Lam, Yee Cheong
Lai, Chang Quan
author_sort Kanaujia, Pawan Kumar
title Mechanical response of lightweight hollow truss metal oxide lattices
title_short Mechanical response of lightweight hollow truss metal oxide lattices
title_full Mechanical response of lightweight hollow truss metal oxide lattices
title_fullStr Mechanical response of lightweight hollow truss metal oxide lattices
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical response of lightweight hollow truss metal oxide lattices
title_sort mechanical response of lightweight hollow truss metal oxide lattices
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143074
https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/MLBDZA
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