Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1449249 Acta Materialia 2007 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The structure–property relationships in newly developed polymer micro-truss structures were investigated, correlating compressive behavior with structural features, including density, cell size and truss angle. These open-cellular polymer micro-truss structures were formed from an interpenetrating array of self-propagating polymer waveguides. Compression experiments verified that the effective modulus scaled linearly with the measured relative density of the micro-trusses and was reliably predicted from a simple analytical model. However, the measured peak strength at initial truss member buckling was well below the values predicted from inelastic buckling theory, which was attributed to imperfections in the structure and the nonlinear compressive behavior of the solid polymer. In addition, a micro-truss structure was post cured at a higher temperature in an oxidizing environment which suppressed the tendency for truss members to prematurely buckle. The polymer modulus increased by approximately 40% and the peak strength of the micro-truss structure nearly doubled to 5.9 MPa.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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