Abstract

Owing to their ability to provide tunable mechanical responses, lattice materials are frequently studied to elucidate their response to static and dynamic loads. However, these roles are typically in opposition: static loads must be supported sufficiently far away from the onset of buckling or yielding, whereas dynamic loads are typically ameliorated by crushing of the lattice, which provides excellent energy-absorption due to the large plastic deformation accompanying densification. In contrast, this work considers the octet truss as an exemplar topology, in a structural role where it must simultaneously support static loads while enduring high-amplitude impulsive loads. This study focuses on the ability to withstand impulsive loads without yielding, an essential prerequisite to enduring dual loading. Computational studies using the ALE3D hydrocode were performed to examine the response of the octet truss under a short temporal width impulse shape associated with laser-driven shocks. A key finding was that covering the lattice with a solid face sheet and treating this face sheet thickness as a design variable allows the Taylor-like pulse to be attenuated prior to entering the weaker lattice, at the cost of added mass up front. Experimental validation was accomplished by laser-driven shock testing, using octet trusses printed out of Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr. The results show that for a given quantity of mass, the attenuation is maximized when as much mass as possible is moved into the face sheet, leaving a more slender lattice structure. The effect of placing mass in the face sheet rather than lattice beams dominates the effect of relative density, to the point where a low-mass structure with most of the mass concentrated in the face sheet can outperform a high-mass structure with most of the mass in the lattice. By further understanding the propagation of short pulse width waves within under-dense structures, this study expand the domain of applicability of such structures, including lattice materials, to challenging dual-loading regimes spanning decades of strain rates.

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