In recent decades, nature has inspired the engineering of many structural and smart materials. Nano-vascularization has been stimulating research on advanced materials for novel biomedical, orthopaedic, industrial, and aeronautical applications. The continuous development of nano-vascularized materials re-quires a more accurate understanding of their mechanical behaviour. This work provides a multiscale methodology to predict the macroscale properties of nano-vascularized materials. The methodology is experimentally validated for the case of a nano-vascularized epoxy resin manufactured using sacrificial electrospun nanofibers. It is based on the development of representative volume elements (RVEs) that encompass information about both the nanochannels distribution and on the mechanical properties of the material at different dimensional scales. The RVEs simulations allowed obtaining a homogenized model describing the nano-vascularized material properties and studying the most intimate failure mechanisms. A virtual stress tomographic investigation on the RVEs was adopted as a digital twin to reveal the damage evolution and the actual failure mechanisms of the nano-vascularized material: damage occurred mainly at the nanochannels intersections, particularly where the intersections become dense. Interestingly, the si-mulations revealed a correlation between the stress state and the formation of feather markings as well as local failures on the nanochannels linking directions, as evidenced by SEM analysis. (c) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Nano-vascularized polymers: how nanochannels impact the mechanical behaviour at the macroscale

Graziani, G;
2022-01-01

Abstract

In recent decades, nature has inspired the engineering of many structural and smart materials. Nano-vascularization has been stimulating research on advanced materials for novel biomedical, orthopaedic, industrial, and aeronautical applications. The continuous development of nano-vascularized materials re-quires a more accurate understanding of their mechanical behaviour. This work provides a multiscale methodology to predict the macroscale properties of nano-vascularized materials. The methodology is experimentally validated for the case of a nano-vascularized epoxy resin manufactured using sacrificial electrospun nanofibers. It is based on the development of representative volume elements (RVEs) that encompass information about both the nanochannels distribution and on the mechanical properties of the material at different dimensional scales. The RVEs simulations allowed obtaining a homogenized model describing the nano-vascularized material properties and studying the most intimate failure mechanisms. A virtual stress tomographic investigation on the RVEs was adopted as a digital twin to reveal the damage evolution and the actual failure mechanisms of the nano-vascularized material: damage occurred mainly at the nanochannels intersections, particularly where the intersections become dense. Interestingly, the si-mulations revealed a correlation between the stress state and the formation of feather markings as well as local failures on the nanochannels linking directions, as evidenced by SEM analysis. (c) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
2022
Nano-vascularization
Multiscale modeling
Electrospinning
Virtual stress -tomography
Nanoscale damage
Finite element method
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1239181
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