Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
797718 Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 2016 22 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Describes a method for optimizing lattice materials for structural performance.•Develops a parameterized model for the response of arbitrary lattice structures.•Optimizes over the parameterized design space to find novel lattice mesostructures.•Novel structures include an elastically isotropic stretch dominated lattice.

This work describes a method for optimizing the mesostructure of lattice-structured materials. These materials are periodic arrays of slender members resembling efficient, lightweight macroscale structures like bridges and frame buildings. Current additive manufacturing technologies can assemble lattice structures with length scales ranging from nanometers to millimeters. Previous work demonstrates that lattice materials have excellent stiffness- and strength-to-weight scaling, outperforming natural materials. However, there are currently no methods for producing optimal mesostructures that consider the full space of possible 3D lattice topologies. The inverse homogenization approach for optimizing the periodic structure of lattice materials requires a parameterized, homogenized material model describing the response of an arbitrary structure. This work develops such a model, starting with a method for describing the long-wavelength, macroscale deformation of an arbitrary lattice. The work combines the homogenized model with a parameterized description of the total design space to generate a parameterized model. Finally, the work describes an optimization method capable of producing optimal mesostructures. Several examples demonstrate the optimization method. One of these examples produces an elastically isotropic, maximally stiff structure, here called the isotruss, that arguably outperforms the anisotropic octet truss topology.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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