A residual performance methodology to evaluate multifunctional systems

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Abstract

The development of multifunctional materials and structures is receiving increasing interest for many applications and industries; it is a promising way to increase system-wide efficiency and improve the ability to meet environmental targets. However, quantifying the advantages of a multifunctional solution over monofunctional systems can be challenging. One approach is to calculate a reduction in mass, volume or other penalty function. Another approach is to use a multifunctional efficiency metric. However, either approach can lead to results that are unfamiliar or difficult to interpret and implement for an audience without a multifunctional materials or structures background. Instead, we introduce a comparative metric for multifunctional materials that correlates with familiar design parameters for monofunctional materials. This metric allows the potential benefits of the multifunctional system to be understood easily without needing a holistic viewpoint. The analysis is applied to two different examples of multifunctional systems; a structural battery and a structural supercapacitor, demonstrating the methodology and its potential for state-of-the-art structural power materials to offer a weight saving over conventional systems. This metric offers a new way to communicate research on structural power which could help identify and prioritise future research.

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Johannisson, W., Nguyen, S., Lindbergh, G., Zenkert, D., Greenhalgh, E. S., Shaffer, M. S. P., & Kucernak, A. R. J. (2020). A residual performance methodology to evaluate multifunctional systems. Multifunctional Materials, 3(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/2399-7532/ab8e95

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