Multi‐material 3D printing of functionally graded hierarchical soft–hard composites

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Mohammad Javad Mirzaali (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

M. Cruz Saldivar (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Alba Herranz de la Nava (Student TU Delft)

Deepthishre Gunashekar (Student TU Delft)

Mahdiyeh Nouri Goushki (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

EL Doubrovski (TU Delft - Mechatronic Design)

Amir A. A. Zadpoor (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Research Group
Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics
Copyright
© 2020 Mohammad J. Mirzaali, M. Cruz Saldivar, Alba Herranz de la Nava, Deepthishre Gunashekar, M. Nouri Goushki, E.L. Doubrovski, A.A. Zadpoor
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1002/adem.201901142
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 Mohammad J. Mirzaali, M. Cruz Saldivar, Alba Herranz de la Nava, Deepthishre Gunashekar, M. Nouri Goushki, E.L. Doubrovski, A.A. Zadpoor
Research Group
Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics
Issue number
7
Volume number
22
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Abstract

Hard biological tissues (e.g., nacre and bone) have evolved for millions of years, enabling them to overcome the conflict between different mechanical properties. The key to their success lies in the combination of limited material ingredients (i.e., hard and soft constituents) and mechanistic ingredients (e.g., functional gradients and building block hierarchical organization). However, the contribution of each material and mechanistic ingredient is still unknown, hindering the development of efficient synthetic composites. Quantitative and systematic studies of hard–soft composites are required to unravel every factor's role in properties outcome. Herein, a voxel‐by‐voxel multi‐material 3D printing technique is used to design and additively manufacture different groups of hard–soft composites. Several combinations of gradients, multilevel hierarchies, and brick‐and‐mortar arrangements are created. Single‐edge notched fracture specimens are mechanically tested and computationally simulated using extended finite element method (XFEM). It is found that functional gradients alone are not sufficient to improve fracture properties. However, up to twice the fracture energy of the hard face is observed when combining functional gradients with hierarchical designs, significantly increasing composite properties. Microscopic analysis, digital image correlation, and strain distributions predicted with XFEM are used to discuss the mechanisms responsible for the observed behaviors.