Performance of a 3D printed cellular structure inspired by bone

被引:54
|
作者
Ghazlan, Abdallah [1 ]
Tuan Nguyen [1 ]
Tuan Ngo [1 ]
Linforth, Steven [1 ]
Van Tu Le [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Melbourne, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
关键词
Bioinspired; 3D printing; Trabecular bone; Thin-walled cellular structure; Numerical analysis; MECHANICAL-BEHAVIOR; COMPOSITE; PANELS; GEOMETRY; QUILLS; FOAM;
D O I
10.1016/j.tws.2020.106713
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
Biological thin-walled cellular structures have intricate arrangements that facilitate lightweight and high energy absorption. A prime example is trabecular bone, which possesses a unique thin-walled cellular structure of connected rods or plates, to minimise weight whilst meeting the loading demands from the body. For example, the femur has a closed cell structure of plates to transmit heavy loads to the ground, whereas a carpal bone has an open cell structure of connected rods. Although existing lightweight thin-walled cellular structures with controlled arrangements have been investigated extensively, such as those with re-entrant geometries, asymmetric instability due to local buckling can hinder their energy absorption capacity. Mimicking the features of trabecular bone can offer the designer a greater degree of control over the buckling and collapse mechanisms of thin-walled cellular structures. This can lead to the development of high-performance protective systems with superior energy absorption capabilities. This study employs 3D printing and finite element analysis techniques to mimic and investigate several key features of the plate-like thin-walled cellular structure of trabecular bone. The performance of the developed bioinspired structure is benchmarked against traditional hexagonal and re-entrant designs. The controlled and progressive buckling and collapse mechanisms observed in the bioinspired structure result in superior energy absorption over its re-entrant and hexagonal counterparts.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] A method of failure modeling for 3D printed cellular structures
    Kucewicz, Michal
    Baranowski, Pawel
    Malachowski, Jerzy
    MATERIALS & DESIGN, 2019, 174
  • [22] 3D-Printed lattice-inspired composites for bone reconstruction
    Guo, Wenmin
    Xu, Huanhuan
    Liu, Dachuan
    Dong, Li
    Liang, Ting
    Li, Bin
    Meng, Bin
    Chen, Song
    JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY B, 2023, 11 (31) : 7353 - 7363
  • [23] Design and optimization of 3D fast printed cellular structures
    Collini L.
    Ursini C.
    Kumar A.
    Material Design and Processing Communications, 2021, 3 (04):
  • [24] Bone-inspired healing of 3D-printed porous ceramics
    Xin, An
    Yu, Kunhao
    Zhang, Runrun
    Ruan, Bingyuan
    McGaughey, Allyson L.
    Feng, Zhangzhengrong
    Lee, Kyung Hoon
    Chen, Yong
    Childress, Amy E.
    Wang, Qiming
    MATERIALS HORIZONS, 2020, 7 (08) : 2130 - 2140
  • [25] 3D-printed cellular structures for bone biomimetic implants
    Limmahakhun, Sakkadech
    Oloyede, Adekunle
    Sitthiseripratip, Kriskrai
    Xiao, Yin
    Yan, Cheng
    ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING, 2017, 15 : 93 - 101
  • [26] Mechanical Properties and Compression Performance of 3D Printed HIPS Polymer Lattice Structure
    Jin, Feng
    Lu, Wanqing
    An, Xu
    Zhu, Haifeng
    Wang, Jun
    MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY, 2024, 24 (03): : 378 - 392
  • [27] 3D printed bone tissue regenerative PLA/HA scaffolds with comprehensive performance optimizations
    Zhang, Boqing
    Wang, Ling
    Song, Ping
    Pei, Xuan
    Sun, Huan
    Wu, Lina
    Zhou, Changchun
    Wang, Kefeng
    Fan, Yujiang
    Zhang, Xingdong
    MATERIALS & DESIGN, 2021, 201
  • [28] Performance of 3D printed PCL/PLGA/HA biological bone tissue engineering scaffold
    Ma, Zhiyong
    Wang, Qifan
    Xie, Wenjia
    Ye, Wenjie
    Zhong, Linna
    Huge, Jile
    Wang, Ying
    POLYMER COMPOSITES, 2021, 42 (07) : 3593 - 3602
  • [29] Powder-Based 3D Printed Porous Structure and Its Application as Bone Scaffold
    Zhao, Yingchun
    Hou, Yue
    Li, Zhaoyu
    Wang, Ziyu
    Yan, Xinxin
    FRONTIERS IN MATERIALS, 2020, 7
  • [30] A 3D printed TCP/HA structure as a new osteoconductive scaffold for vertical bone augmentation
    Carrel, Jean-Pierre
    Wiskott, Anselm
    Moussa, Mira
    Rieder, Philippe
    Scherrer, Susanne
    Durual, Stephane
    CLINICAL ORAL IMPLANTS RESEARCH, 2016, 27 (01) : 55 - 62