Low Magnetic Field Induced Extrinsic Strains in Multifunctional Particulate Composites: An Interrupted Mechanical Strengthening in 3D-Printed Nanocomposites

Author:

Mucolli Andiol1,Midmer Alden1ORCID,Manolesos Marinos2,Aldosari Salem3ORCID,Lira Cristian4ORCID,Yazdani Nezhad Hamed5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Science and Technology, City, University of London, London EC1V 0HB, UK

2. School of Mechanical Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, 10682 Athens, Greece

3. Innovation Parks, King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology, Riyadh 11442, Saudi Arabia

4. Engineering Development, National Composites Centre, Bristol BS16 7FS, UK

5. School of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds LS9 2JT, UK

Abstract

The current paper reports on the quantification of the effect of magnetic fields on the mechanical performance of ferromagnetic nanocomposites in situ during basic standard tensile testing. The research investigates altering the basic mechanical properties (modulus and strength) via the application of a contact-less magnetic field as a primary attempt for a future composites strengthening mechanism. The nanocomposite specimens were fabricated using filament-based 3D printing and were comprised of ferromagnetic nanoparticle-embedded thermoplastic polymers. The nanoparticles were iron particles dispersed at 21 wt.% (10.2 Vol.%) inside a polylactic acid (PLA) polymer, characterised utilising optical microscopy and 3D X-ray computed tomography. The magnetic field was stationary and produced using permanent neodymium round-shaped magnets available at two field strengths below 1 Tesla. The 3D printing was a MakerBot Replicator machine operating based upon a fused deposition method, which utilised 1.75 mm-diameter filaments made of iron particle-based PLA composites. The magnetic field-equipped tensile tests were accompanied by a real-time digital image correlation technique for localized strain measurements across the specimens at a 10-micron pixel resolution. It was observed that the lateral magnetic field induces a slight Poisson effect on the development of extrinsic strain across the length of the tensile specimens. However, the effect reasonably interferes with the evolution of strain fields via the introduction of localised compressive strains attributed to accumulated magnetic polarisation at the magnetic particles on an extrinsic scale. The theory overestimated the moduli by a factor of approximately 3.1. To enhance the accuracy of its solutions for 3D-printed specimens, it is necessary to incorporate pore considerations into the theoretical derivations. Additionally, a modest 10% increase in ultimate tensile strength was observed during tensile loading. This finding suggests that field-assisted strengthening can be effective for as-received 3D-printed magnetic composites in their solidified state, provided that the material and field are optimally designed and implemented. This approach could propose a viable method for remote field tailoring to strengthen the material by mitigating defects induced during the 3D printing process.

Funder

UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Bacterial magnetosome inspired material discovery for high sensitivity to ultra-low magnetic fields

Publisher

MDPI AG

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