4.8 Article

3D Printing of Liquid Crystal Elastomer Foams for Enhanced Energy Dissipation Under Mechanical Insult

期刊

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
卷 13, 期 11, 页码 12698-12708

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c17538

关键词

liquid crystal elastomer; digital light processing; 3D printing; polymer foam; energy dissipation

资金

  1. Laboratory Directed Research and Development program at Sandia National Laboratories [DE-NA0003525]
  2. U.S. Army Research Office [W911NF1710165]
  3. NSF CAREER Award [CMMI-1350436]
  4. U.S. Army Research Laboratory
  5. U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) [W911NF1710165] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Defense (DOD)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates novel approaches to control the foam structure and the matrix phase mechanical behavior to enhance the energy absorption capability of flexible lattice foams. The introduction of an additional energy dissipation mechanism in the solid matrix phase material through 3D printing lattice foams with polydomain liquid crystal elastomer (LCE) shows dramatically enhanced energy dissipation compared to conventional elastomer lattice foams. Increasing lattice connectivity leads to higher energy dissipation in the lattice foam, with stretching allowing greater mesogen rotation than bending.
Polymer foams are an essential class of lightweight materials used to protect assets against mechanical insults, such as shock and vibration. Two features are important to enhance their energy absorption characteristics: the foam structure and the matrix phase mechanical behavior. This study investigates novel approaches to control both of these features to enhance the energy absorption capability of flexible lattice foams. First, we consider 3D printing via digital light processing (DLP) as a method to control the foam mesostructure across a suite of periodic unit cells. Second, we introduce an additional energy dissipation mechanism in the solid matrix phase material by 3D printing the lattice foams with polydomain liquid crystal elastomer (LCE), which undergo a mechanically induced phase transition under large strains. This phase transition is associated with LC mesogen rotation and alignment and provides a second mechanism for mechanical energy dissipation in addition to the viscoelastic relaxation of the polymer network. We contrast the 3D printed LCE lattices with conventional, thermomechanically near-equivalent elastomer lattice foams to quantify the energy-absorbing enhancement the LCE matrix phase provides. Under cyclic quasi-static uniaxial compression conditions, the LCE lattices show dramatically enhanced energy dissipation in uniaxial compression compared to the non-LCE equivalent foams printed with a commercially available photocurable elastomer resin. The lattice geometry also plays a prominent role in determining the energy dissipation ratio between the LCE and non-LCE foams. We show that when increasing the lattice connectivity, the foam deformation transitions from bending-dominated to stretching-dominated deformations, which generates higher axial strains in the struts and higher energy dissipation in the lattice foam, as stretching allows greater mesogen rotation than bending. The LCE foams demonstrate superior energy absorption during the repeated dynamic loading during drop testing compared with the non-LCE equivalent foams, demonstrating the potential of LCEs to enhance physical protection systems against mechanical impact.

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