Exploring the Fracture Toughness of Tessellated Materials With the Discrete-Element Method

Author:

Abid Najmul1,Hannard Florent1,William Pro J.1,Barthelat Francois1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, McGill University, 817 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, QC, H3A 2K6, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Architectured materials contain highly controlled structures and morphological features at length scales intermediate between the microscale and the size of the component. In dense architectured materials, stiff building blocks of well-defined size and shape are periodically arranged and bonded by weak but deformable interfaces. The interplay between the architecture of the materials and the interfaces between the blocks can be tailored to control the propagation of cracks while maintaining high stiffness. Interestingly, natural materials such as seashells, bones, or teeth make extensive use of this strategy. While their architecture can serve as inspiration for the design of new synthetic materials, a systematic exploration of architecture-property relationships in architectured materials is still lacking. In this study, we used the discrete element method (DEM) to explore the fracture mechanics of several hundreds of 2D tessellations composed of rigid “tiles” bonded by weaker interfaces. We explored crack propagation and fracture toughness in Voronoi-based tessellations (to represent intergranular cracking in polycrystalline materials), tessellations based on regular polygons, and tessellations based on brick-and-mortar. We identified several toughening mechanisms including crack deflection, crack tortuosity, crack pinning, and process zone toughening. These models show that periodic architectures can achieve higher toughness when compared with random microstructures, the toughest architectures are also the most anisotropic, and tessellations based on brick and mortar are the toughest. These findings are size independent and can serve as initial guidelines in the development of new architectured materials for toughness.

Funder

Fonds de Recherche du Québec - Nature et Technologies

McGill Engineering Doctoral Award

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics

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