4.5 Article

Energy Absorption of 3D Printed ABS and TPU Multimaterial Honeycomb Structures

Journal

3D PRINTING AND ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/3dp.2022.0196

Keywords

3D printing; fused deposition modeling; multimaterial printing; design; honeycomb; mechanics

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This study investigates the effects of multimaterial combinations on energy absorption and deformation of honeycomb structures. The results demonstrate that using multiple materials can significantly improve the performance of honeycomb structures.
Advances in multimaterial 3D printing are enabling the construction of advantageous engineering structures that benefit from material synergies. Cellular structures, such as honeycombs, provide high-energy absorption to weight ratios that could benefit from multimaterial strategies to improve the safety and performance of engineered systems. In this study, we investigate the energy absorption for honeycombs with square and hexagonal unit cells constructed from acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU). Honeycombs were fabricated and tested for out-of-plane and in-plane compression using ABS, TPU, and a combination of ABS with a central TPU band of tunable height. Out-of-plane energy absorption for square honeycombs increased from 2.2 kN center dot mm for TPU samples to 11.5 kN center dot mm for ABS samples and energy absorption of hexagonal honeycombs increased from 2.9 to 15.1 kN center dot mm as proportions of TPU/ABS were altered. In-plane loading demonstrated a sequential collapse of unit cell rows in square honeycombs with energy absorption of 0.1 to 2.6 kN center dot mm and a gradual failure of hexagonal honeycombs with energy absorption of 0.6 to 2.0 kN center dot mm. These results demonstrate how multimaterial combinations affect honeycomb compressive response by highlighting their benefits for controlled energy absorption and deformation for tunable performance in diverse engineering applications.

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