Controlling shockwave dynamics using architecture in periodic porous materials

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Abstract

Additive manufacturing (AM) is an attractive approach for the design and fabrication of structures capable of achieving controlled mechanical response of the underlying deformation mechanisms. While there are numerous examples illustrating how the quasi-static mechanical responses of polymer foams have been tailored by additive manufacturing, there is limited understanding of the response of these materials under shockwave compression. Dynamic compression experiments coupled with time-resolved X-ray imaging were performed to obtain insights into the in situ evolution of shockwave coupling to porous, periodic polymer foams. We further demonstrate shock wave modulation or “spatially graded-flow” in shock-driven experiments via the spatial control of layer symmetries afforded by additive manufacturing techniques at the micron scale.

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Branch, B., Ionita, A., Clements, B. E., Montgomery, D. S., Jensen, B. J., Patterson, B., … Dattelbaum, D. M. (2017). Controlling shockwave dynamics using architecture in periodic porous materials. Journal of Applied Physics, 121(13). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4978910

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