| Literature DB >> 31709753 |
Seyed Mohammad Sajadi1, Cristiano F Woellner2, Prathyush Ramesh1, Shannon L Eichmann3, Qiushi Sun3, Peter J Boul3, Carl J Thaemlitz3, Muhammad M Rahman1, Ray H Baughman4, Douglas S Galvão5, Chandra Sekhar Tiwary1,6, Pulickel M Ajayan1.
Abstract
Lightweight materials with high ballistic impact resistance and load-bearing capabilities are regarded as a holy grail in materials design. Nature builds these complementary properties into materials using soft organic materials with optimized, complex geometries. Here, the compressive deformation and ballistic impact properties of three different 3D printed polymer structures, named tubulanes, are reported, which are the architectural analogues of cross-linked carbon nanotubes. The results show that macroscopic tubulanes are remarkable high load-bearing, hypervelocity impact-resistant lightweight structures. They exhibit a lamellar deformation mechanism, arising from the tubulane ordered pore structure, manifested across multiple length scales from nano to macro dimensions. This approach of using complex geometries inspired by atomic and nanoscale models to generate macroscale printed structures allows innovative morphological engineering of materials with tunable mechanical responses.Entities:
Keywords: 3D printing; ballistic impact resistance; mechanical properties; molecular dynamics (MD) simulation; tubulanes
Year: 2019 PMID: 31709753 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201904747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281