17 research outputs found

    Fabrication of SUS304 Regularly Cell-Structured Material and Their Mechanical Properties

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    The quasi-static flexural and in-plane compressive properties of SUS304 stainless steel with circular close-packed cells are studied. Microstainless steel tubes coated with Ni 3 P were selected for constructing hexagonal close-packed arrays, which are subsequently joined together to form a cellular structure. The fabrication technique developed, involves the diffusion bonding of stacked metal tubes under the compressive stress state during heat treatment. SUS304 cell-structured materials can achieve the high specific flexural stiffness and specific flexural yield strength nearly equal to those for the dense materials. In-plane compressive properties as well as deformation behavior are also observed and discussed in this paper

    Size effects of basic cell in static analysis of sandwich beams

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    AbstractIn this paper, multilayered sandwich beam structures are considered. Within the scope of static analyses and stiffness design of such type of lightweight and functional structures, size effects of the basic cell are studied both theoretically and numerically in a systematic way for the first time. The direct FE discretization method, the homogenization method and the classical beam theory are examined systematically to reveal, on one hand, the existence of the size effect, and on the other hand, the ability of each method in capturing the size effect upon the static stress distribution and structural deflection. Particularly, limitations of the homogenization method are clarified although the latter is widely applied today in the equivalent modeling and topology design of cellular materials of sandwich structures. By means of the above methods, bending problems of multilayered beams and cellular core sandwiches are solved to illustrate variations of the deflection, stress as well as the computing accuracies in terms of the size of the basic cell. It is shown that the size effect is important when the basic cell has a considerable dimension relative to the structural size and that this effect decreases rapidly with the size reduction of the basic cell. Theoretically, the homogenized result corresponds to the limit solution when the size of the basic cell tends to be infinitely small

    Effect of Interface Structure on Mechanical Properties of Advanced Composite Materials

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    This paper deals with the effect of interface structures on the mechanical properties of fiber reinforced composite materials. First, the background of research, development and applications on hybrid composite materials is introduced. Second, metal/polymer composite bonded structures are discussed. Then, the rationale is given for nanostructuring the interface in composite materials and structures by introducing nanoscale features such as nanopores and nanofibers. The effects of modifying matrices and nano-architecturing interfaces on the mechanical properties of nanocomposite materials are examined. A nonlinear damage model for characterizing the deformation behavior of polymeric nanocomposites is presented and the application of this model to carbon nanotube-reinforced and reactive graphite nanotube-reinforced epoxy composite materials is shown

    In-Plane Compression Response of Regularly Cell-Structured Materials

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