TY - JOUR
T1 - Parametric optimization of corner radius in hexagonal honeycombs under in-plane compression
AU - Rajeev, Athul
AU - Grishin, Alex
AU - Agrawal, Varun
AU - Santhanam, Bharath
AU - Goss, Derek
AU - Niverty, Sridhar
AU - Cope, Grace
AU - Penick, Clint
AU - Chawla, Nikhilesh
AU - Shyam, Vikram
AU - McNichols, Ezra
AU - Bhate, Dhruv
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was partially funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) STTR program under contract 80NSSC18P2131 in support of the PeTaL (Periodic Table of Life) project. Dr. Vikram Shyam was the Principal Investigator for PeTaL and the Technical Monitor for the STTR phase 1 contract. Ezra McNichols from NASA's John H. Glenn Research Center was the Technical Monitor for the STTR phase 2 contract. The authors would also like to thank Christine LeBeau and Dr. James Carpenter at the American Museum of Natural History for enabling access to insect nest specimens for imaging.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Society of Manufacturing Engineers
PY - 2022/7
Y1 - 2022/7
N2 - What is the optimum corner radius for a regular hexagonal honeycomb in the context of in-plane, quasistatic compression loading? Drawing inspiration from social insect hexagonal cell nests, where a non-zero corner radius appears to be a design feature, a 400-point design of experiments study is conducted using 2D plane strain Finite Element Analysis (FEA) to study the influence of cell size, beam thickness and corner radius on effective modulus and maximum corner stress in the honeycomb cells. An experimental study is conducted to examine these relationships beyond the bounds of the small deformation, linear elastic FEA analysis. The study finds that corner radii always increase the effective modulus of the honeycomb, even after accounting for the additional mass associated with the corner fillet. A key finding of this work is that while corner radii also reduces the maximum corner stress, there exists a clear optimum, beyond which stresses rise again as the corner radius increases in magnitude. This optimum corner radius is shown to be a function of the beam thickness (t) to beam length (l) ratio (t/l), with the optimum value increasing with increasing t/l. The experimental study shows that the presence of a corner radius shifts the failure mechanism from nodal fracture to plastic hinging for honeycombs with thick beams, and may have benefits for energy absorption applications. This work makes the case for the treatment of the corner radius as an independent design feature for optimization in the wider context of cellular materials, as well as has implications for the study of the geometry of insect nests.
AB - What is the optimum corner radius for a regular hexagonal honeycomb in the context of in-plane, quasistatic compression loading? Drawing inspiration from social insect hexagonal cell nests, where a non-zero corner radius appears to be a design feature, a 400-point design of experiments study is conducted using 2D plane strain Finite Element Analysis (FEA) to study the influence of cell size, beam thickness and corner radius on effective modulus and maximum corner stress in the honeycomb cells. An experimental study is conducted to examine these relationships beyond the bounds of the small deformation, linear elastic FEA analysis. The study finds that corner radii always increase the effective modulus of the honeycomb, even after accounting for the additional mass associated with the corner fillet. A key finding of this work is that while corner radii also reduces the maximum corner stress, there exists a clear optimum, beyond which stresses rise again as the corner radius increases in magnitude. This optimum corner radius is shown to be a function of the beam thickness (t) to beam length (l) ratio (t/l), with the optimum value increasing with increasing t/l. The experimental study shows that the presence of a corner radius shifts the failure mechanism from nodal fracture to plastic hinging for honeycombs with thick beams, and may have benefits for energy absorption applications. This work makes the case for the treatment of the corner radius as an independent design feature for optimization in the wider context of cellular materials, as well as has implications for the study of the geometry of insect nests.
KW - Additive manufacturing
KW - Corner radius
KW - Fillet
KW - Honeycomb
KW - Parametric optimization
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jmapro.2022.04.041
DO - 10.1016/j.jmapro.2022.04.041
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85123342105
VL - 79
SP - 35
EP - 46
JO - Journal of Manufacturing Processes
JF - Journal of Manufacturing Processes
SN - 1526-6125
ER -