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The anomalous crack growth behaviour of an elastic-brittle octet-truss architected solid

Angkur Jyoti Dipanka Shaikeea, David K. Hahn, V. C. Sathish Gandhi, Haitao Cui, Xiaoyu Zheng, V.S. Deshpande

2024Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Strongly rising R-curves are observed for octet-truss architected material specimens comprising ∼1 million unit cells and made from an elastic-brittle parent material. The measurements are supported by finite element (FE) calculations where the octet-truss is modelled discretely and show that the pseudo-ductility is not related to the usual toughening mechanisms such as crack bridging or crack-tip plasticity. Rather, the toughening is attributed to the three-dimensional (3D) structure of the octet-truss specimen: remarkably, no R-curve effect is observed in a quasi two-dimensional (2D) octet-truss specimen. This anomalous behaviour is clarified via FE calculations of the indentation stiffness of the octet-truss which reveal a strong indentation size effect in 3D with the stiffness decreasing with decreasing indenter size relative to the cell size of the octet-truss. In the 3D octet-truss, the size independent continuum stiffness is only attained for indenter sizes greater than about 20 unit cells while the size effect is almost absent in the quasi-2D octet-truss. The strong elastic softening in the 3D octet-truss in the presence of strain gradients gives rise to a large elastic crack-tip process zone. This in turn implies that a specimen geometry independent fracture toughness (i.e., a material property) can only be measured in specimens with large numbers of unit cells. We report a fracture mechanism map that reveals that measurements of specimen geometry independent fracture toughness can only be made in specimens with more than ∼10 million unit cells. This map is also used to rationalise the measured rising R-curves in the 3D specimens with ∼ 1 million unit cells. We end with a discussion on the implication of these findings for the laboratory measurement of the fracture toughness of both architected materials as well as biological cellular materials such as bone.

Topics & Concepts

TrussOctetBrittlenessMaterials scienceStructural engineeringComposite materialEngineeringPhysicsParticle physicsBaryonMechanical Behavior of CompositesCellular and Composite StructuresInnovations in Concrete and Construction Materials