Abstract

Zero thermal expansion (ZTE) is strongly demanded for critical components of spacecraft structures exposed to extreme temperature variations in space. In this paper, a lattice metastructure with near-ZTE is numerically achieved by structural optimization method. A sandwich panel with one single layer of hourglass-type lattice cells with variable cross-sectional and bi-material beams are assembled to produce either positive or negative thermal expansion (PTE or NTE). Then, a multilayered construction of metastructures is proposed by the combination of both PTE and NTE layers to realize the overall behaviors of near-zero deformation. The structural optimization with the gradient-based algorithm is utilized to obtain an extreme low value of coefficient of thermal expansion (∼10-9 /K). The shape constraint is adopted to regulate the thermal deformation of contact surfaces of each layer. Furthermore, bi-material prototypes with nylon and short carbon fiber reinforced composites are fabricated and tested, and the results demonstrate a NTE value of −6.32 × 10-5 /K, PTE value of + 1.28 × 10-4 /K, and ZTE value of 2.53 × 10-6 /K. This agrees well with the optimization result. Overall, the proposed hourglass-lattice metastructure with a high thermal stability is a promising solution to enable large-scale space structures such as space telescope, antenna, and radar, etc.

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