Abstract

While over the past decade architected cellular materials have been shown to possess unique mechanical properties, their thermal properties have received relatively little attention. Here, we investigate thermal transport in hollow nickel microlattices as a function of temperature and mechanical loading using infrared thermography. The effective thermal conductivity of hollow nickel microlattices with 99.9% porosity and 1 µm layer thickness is as low as 0.049 W m−1 K−1 at 320 K and increases to 0.075 W m−1 K−1 at 480 K, an increase we attribute to internal thermal radiation. By measuring the emissivity and using the Stephan-Boltzmann law, we estimate the contribution of thermal radiation in the effective thermal conductivity to range from 20% at 320 K to 49% at 480 K. The high porosity of microlattices strongly limits solid conduction and makes surface radiation very important in thermal transport. We further explore the impact of the strut surface condition by comparing hollow doped nickel microlattices with a smooth surface to those with a rough surface: the emissivity increases from 0.24 to 0.43, leading to increased thermal radiation contributions of 41% at 320 K to 58% at 480 K. Under mechanical loading, as the strain increases from 0% to 50%, decreasing the angle between the struts and the horizontal plane from 60° to 38°, the effective thermal conductivity decreases from 0.049 W m−1 K−1 to 0.016 W m−1 K−1. These findings indicate that architected cellular materials provide an excellent platform to control thermal properties independently on mechanical properties and to potentially develop thermal and thermomechanical metamaterials.

Highlights

  • Recent advances in additive manufacturing have led to architected materials with strongly hierarchical topologies and fascinating properties such as ultrahigh strength, ultrahigh surface-to-volume ratio, and ultralow density.1–4 High precision additive manufacturing techniques such as self-propagating photopolymer waveguides (SPPW),5 direct laser writing (DLW),6,7 and projection microstereolithography (PμSL)8 have enabled the fabrication of lattices with submicron feature sizes9–12 and high porosity up to 99.9%

  • These findings indicate that architected cellular materials provide an excellent platform to control thermal properties independently on mechanical properties and to potentially develop thermal and thermomechanical metamaterials

  • The measurement was performed in a vacuum environment, and the effective thermal conductivity was measured under compression from 0% up to 50% strain for the samples with a volume fraction of 0.09%

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Summary

Introduction

Recent advances in additive manufacturing have led to architected materials with strongly hierarchical topologies and fascinating properties such as ultrahigh strength, ultrahigh surface-to-volume ratio, and ultralow density. High precision additive manufacturing techniques such as self-propagating photopolymer waveguides (SPPW), direct laser writing (DLW), and projection microstereolithography (PμSL) have enabled the fabrication of lattices with submicron feature sizes and high porosity up to 99.9%. High precision additive manufacturing techniques such as self-propagating photopolymer waveguides (SPPW), direct laser writing (DLW), and projection microstereolithography (PμSL) have enabled the fabrication of lattices with submicron feature sizes and high porosity up to 99.9%. These microlattices and nanolattices can offer extremely high specific stiffness and strength, or full recovery from very large compressive strains (>50%) and associated structural damping, despite their constituent materials being inherently brittle.

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