| Literature DB >> 33352635 |
Timo Sippach1, Hanaa Dahy2,3,4, Kai Uhlig5, Benjamin Grisin6, Stefan Carosella6, Peter Middendorf6.
Abstract
Under normal conditions, the cross-sections of reinforced concrete in classic skeleton construction systems are often only partially loaded. This contributes to non-sustainable construction solutions due to an excess of material use. Novel cross-disciplinary workflows linking architects, engineers, material scientists and manufacturers could offer alternative means for more sustainable architectural applications with extra lightweight solutions. Through material-specific use of plant-based Natural Fiber-Reinforced Polymer Composites (NFRP), also named Biocomposites, a high-performance lightweight structure with topology optimized cross-sections has been here developed. The closed life cycle of NFRPs promotes sustainability in construction through energy recovery of the quickly generative biomass-based materials. The cooperative design resulted in a development that were verified through a 1:10 demonstrator, whose fibrous morphology was defined by biomimetically-inspired orthotropic tectonics, generated with by the fiber path optimization software tools, namely EdoStructure and EdoPath in combination with the appliance of the digital additive manufacturing technique: Tailored Fiber Placement (TFP).Entities:
Keywords: architectural lightweight structure; biocomposites; biomimetics; flax fiber; high-performance structure; material-appropriate design; natural fiber reinforced polymer composites NFRP; sustainable architecture; tailored fiber placement; topology optimization
Year: 2020 PMID: 33352635 PMCID: PMC7766598 DOI: 10.3390/polym12123048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329