Image-based numerical characterization and experimental validation of tensile behavior of octet-truss lattice structures
Nina Korshunova, Gianluca Alaimo, Seyyed Bahram Hosseini, Massimo, Carraturo, Alessandro Reali, Jarkko Niiranen, Ferdinando Auricchio, Ernst, Rank, Stefan Kollmannsberger

TL;DR
This study presents an efficient numerical framework using the Finite Cell Method to accurately simulate the tensile behavior of 3D printed octet-truss lattice structures, incorporating actual geometries obtained from CT scans.
Contribution
It introduces an embedded numerical approach that integrates CT-derived geometries into simulations, improving the prediction accuracy of mechanical behavior of additively manufactured lattice structures.
Findings
CT-based simulations match experimental results closely
As-designed models significantly deviate from experimental data
Embedded numerical methods effectively incorporate manufacturing defects
Abstract
The production of lightweight metal lattice structures has received much attention due to the recent developments in additive manufacturing (AM). The design flexibility comes, however, with the complexity of the underlying physics. In fact, metal additive manufacturing introduces process-induced geometrical defects that mainly result in deviations of the effective geometry from the nominal one. This change in the final printed shape is the primary cause of the gap between the as-designed and as-manufactured mechanical behavior of AM products. Thus, the possibility to incorporate the precise manufactured geometries into the computational analysis is crucial for the quality and performance assessment of the final parts. Computed tomography (CT) is an accurate method for the acquisition of the manufactured shape. However, it is often not feasible to integrate the CT-based geometrical…
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