Mechanical performance of reverse-engineered resin foam structures developed by image processing on the computed tomography data: A revisit
Künye
Kaya, Ali C., Rastanawi, N., Korucu, A. (2024). Mechanical performance of reverse-engineered resin foam structures developed by image processing on the computed tomography data: A revisit. Materials Today Communications, 36Özet
Using digital design methods, additive manufacturing processes enable us to create novel complex structures. In
the current study, 3 and 10 ppi, density-graded, and merged foams (digitally joined 3 and 10 ppi) were reproduced from computed tomography data of the commercially available steel foams using MSLA (masked stereolithography). The mechanical performance of the foams has been characterized by quasi-static compression
testing. Density grading increases the slope of the plateau regime and reduces the densification strain. Merged
foams at high relative densities (ρrel~35 %) showed the highest energy absorption capacity, specific strength, and
densification strain. 3,10 and density-graded foams deform by bending of struts. In the case of merged foams, the
bending-dominated structure has been transformed into a stretch-dominated structure. The power exponent
(n = 0.72) delivers the deformation mode of the strut, revealing stretch-dominated behavior. Moreover, additively manufactured resin foams have a lower scattering in mechanical properties than conventionally manufactured metal foams because structures can be remanufactured with the same cell/strut dimensions and
imperfections.