Embracing Nonlinearity and Geometry: A dimensional analysis guided design of shock absorbing materials
Abhishek Gupta, Komal Chawla, Ramathasan Thevamaran

TL;DR
This paper presents a dimensional analysis framework for designing lightweight, compact shock-absorbing foams with nonlinear stress-strain responses, enabling improved protective materials for impact mitigation.
Contribution
It introduces a new geometric and mechanical design framework for optimizing nonlinear foam structures, particularly for thin, lightweight protective pads.
Findings
Nonlinear foam responses can be effective for protective pads.
The framework guides the design of optimal foam geometries and properties.
Hierarchically architected VACNT foams achieve superior protective performance.
Abstract
Protective applications require energy-absorbing materials that are soft and compressible enough to absorb kinetic energy from impacts, yet stiff enough to bear crushing loads. Achieving this balance requires careful consideration of both mechanical properties of the material and geometry of the shock-absorbing pads. Conventional shock-absorbing pads are typically made from very thick foams that exhibit a plateau of constant stress in their stress-strain response, while foams with a non-linearly stiffening stress-strain response are often considered ineffective. Contrary to this belief, we demonstrate that foams with a nonlinear stress-strain response can be effective for achieving protective pads that are both thin and lightweight, particularly for pad geometries requiring a large cross-sectional area. We introduce a new framework for the thickness or volume-constrained design of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Theoretical and Applied Studies in Material Sciences and Geometry · Elasticity and Material Modeling · Mechanical Engineering and Vibrations Research
