Fabrication and extreme micromechanics of additive metal microarchitectures
Sung-Gyu Kang, Barbara Bellon, Lalithkumar Bhaskar, Siyuan Zhang,, Alexander Gotz, Janis Wirth, Benjamin Apeleo Zubiri, Szilvia Kalacska, Manish, Jain, Amit Sharma, Wabe Koelmans, Giorgio Ercolano, Erdmann Spiecker, Johann, Michler, Jakob Schwiedrzik, Gerhard Dehm

TL;DR
This study investigates the temperature- and rate-dependent mechanical behavior of additively manufactured copper microlattices, revealing how microstructure and deformation mechanisms vary under different conditions.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of the extreme micromechanical behavior of additive metal microarchitectures with microstructure-dependent deformation mechanisms.
Findings
Copper microlattices show temperature and strain rate dependent deformation behaviors.
Dislocation slip dominates at room temperature, while twinning occurs at cryogenic temperatures.
Microstructural analysis links deformation mechanisms to temperature and strain rate.
Abstract
The mechanical performance of metallic metamaterials with 3-dimensional solid frames is typically a combination of the geometrical effect ("architecture") and the characteristic size effects of the base material ("microstructure"). In this study, for the first time, the temperature- and rate-dependent mechanical response of copper microlattices has been investigated. The microlattices were fabricated via a localized electrodeposition in liquid (LEL) process which enables high-precision additive manufacturing of metal at the micro-scale. The metal microlattices possess a unique microstructure with micron sized grains that are rich with randomly oriented growth twins and near-ideal nodal connectivity. Importantly, copper microlattices exhibited unique temperature (-150 and 25 degree C) and strain rate (0.001~100 s-1) dependent deformation behavior during in situ micromechanical testing.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-Velocity Impact and Material Behavior · Cellular and Composite Structures · Microstructure and mechanical properties
