Browsing by Author "Yang, Ting"
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- Bioinspired design of flexible armor based on chiton scalesConnors, Matthew; Yang, Ting; Hosny, Ahmed; Deng, Zhifei; Yazdandoost, Fatemeh; Massaadi, Hajar; Eernisse, Douglas; Mirzaeifar, Reza; Dean, Mason N.; Weaver, James C.; Ortiz, Christine; Li, Ling (Springer Nature, 2019-12-10)Man-made armors often rely on rigid structures for mechanical protection, which typically results in a trade-off with flexibility and maneuverability. Chitons, a group of marine mollusks, evolved scaled armors that address similar challenges. Many chiton species possess hundreds of small, mineralized scales arrayed on the soft girdle that surrounds their overlapping shell plates. Ensuring both flexibility for locomotion and protection of the underlying soft body, the scaled girdle is an excellent model for multifunctional armor design. Here we conduct a systematic study of the material composition, nanomechanical properties, three-dimensional geometry, and interspecific structural diversity of chiton girdle scales. Moreover, inspired by the tessellated organization of chiton scales, we fabricate a synthetic flexible scaled armor analogue using parametric computational modeling and multi-material 3D printing. This approach allows us to conduct a quantitative evaluation of our chiton-inspired armor to assess its orientation-dependent flexibility and protection capabilities.
- High strength and damage-tolerance in echinoderm stereom as a natural bicontinuous ceramic cellular solidYang, Ting; Jia, Zian; Wu, Ziling; Chen, Hongshun; Deng, Zhifei; Chen, Liuni; Zhu, Yunhui; Li, Ling (Nature Research, 2022-10-14)Due to their low damage tolerance, engineering ceramic foams are often limited to non-structural usages. In this work, we report that stereom, a bioceramic cellular solid (relative density, 0.2–0.4) commonly found in the mineralized skeletal elements of echinoderms (e.g., sea urchin spines), achieves simultaneous high relative strength which approaches the Suquet bound and remarkable energy absorption capability (ca. 17.7 kJ kg⁻¹) through its unique bicontinuous open-cell foam-likemicrostructure. The high strength is due to the ultra-low stress concentrationswithin the stereom during loading, resulted from their defect-free cellular morphologies with near-constant surface mean curvatures and negative Gaussian curvatures. Furthermore, the combination of bending-induced microfracture of branches and subsequent local jamming of fractured fragments facilitated by small throat openings in stereom leads to the progressive formation and growth of damage bands with significant microscopic densification of fragments, and consequently, contributes to stereom’s exceptionally high damage tolerance.
- Interfacial Dynamics in Dual Channels: Inspired by CuttleboneHuang, Matthew; Frohlich, Karl; Esmaili, Ehsan; Yang, Ting; Li, Ling; Jung, Sunghwan (MDPI, 2023-10-01)The cuttlebone, a chambered gas-filled structure found in cuttlefish, serves a crucial role in buoyancy control for the animal. This study investigates the motion of liquid-gas interfaces within cuttlebone-inspired artificial channels. The cuttlebone’s unique microstructure, characterized by chambers divided by vertical pillars, exhibits interesting fluid dynamics at small scales while pumping water in and out. Various channels were fabricated with distinct geometries, mimicking cuttlebone features, and subjected to different pressure drops. The behavior of the liquid-gas interface was explored, revealing that channels with pronounced waviness facilitated more non-uniform air-water interfaces. Here, Lyapunov exponents were employed to characterize interface separation, and they indicated more differential motions with increased pressure drops. Channels with greater waviness and amplitude exhibited higher Lyapunov exponents, while straighter channels exhibited slower separation. This is potentially aligned with cuttlefish’s natural adaptation to efficient water transport near the membrane, where more straight channels are observed in real cuttlebone.
- Mechanical Design of Selected Natural Ceramic Cellular SolidsYang, Ting (Virginia Tech, 2021-05-24)While the structure and mechanical properties of natural cellular solids such as wood and trabecular bone have been extensively studied in the past, the structural design and underlying deformation mechanisms of natural cellular solids with very high mineral contents (> 90 wt%), which we term as natural ceramic cellular solids, are largely unexplored. Many of these natural ceramic cellular solids, despite their inherent brittle constituent biominerals (e.g., calcite or aragonite), exhibit remarkable mechanical properties, such as high stiffness and damage tolerance. In this thesis, by carefully selecting three biomineralized skeletal models with distinctly different cellular morphologies, including the honeycomb-like structure in cuttlefish bone (or cuttlebone), the stochastic open-cell structure in sea urchin spines, and the periodic open-cell structure in starfish ossicles, I systematically investigate the mechanical design strategies of these natural ceramic cellular solids. The three model systems are cuttlefish Sepia officinalis, sea urchin Heterocentrotus mammillatus, and starfish Protoreaster nodosus, respectively. By investigating the relationship between their mechanical properties and structural characteristics, this thesis reveals some novel structural design strategies for developing lightweight, tough, strong, and stiff ceramic cellular solids. The internal skeleton of S. officinalis, also known as cuttlebone, has a porosity of 93 vol% (constituent material: 90 wt% aragonite), which is a multichambered structure consisting of horizontal septa and thin vertical walls with corrugated cross-sectional profiles. Through systematic ex-situ and synchrotron-based in-situ mechanical measurements and collaborative computational modeling, we reveal that the vertical walls in the cuttlebone exhibit an optimal waviness gradient, which leads to compression-dominant deformation and asymmetric wall fracture, accomplishing both high stiffness (8.4 MN∙m/kg) and high energy absorption (4.4 kJ/kg). Moreover, the distribution of walls reduces stress concentrations within the horizontal septa, facilitating a larger chamber crushing stress and more significant densification. For the stochastic open-cell foam-like structure, also known as stereom (porosity: 60-80 vol%, constituent material: 99 wt% calcite) in H. mammillatus, we first developed a computer vision-based algorithm that allows for quantitative analysis of the cellular network of these structures at both local individual branch and node level as well as the global network level. This open-source algorithm could be used for analyzing both biological and engineering open-cell foams. I further show that the smooth, highly curved branch morphology with near-constant surface curvature in stereom results in low-stress concentration, which further leads to dispersed crack formation upon loading. Combined synchrotron in-situ analysis, electron microscopic analysis, and computational modeling further reveal that the fractured branches are efficiently jammed by the small throat openings within the cellular structure. This further leads to the formation of damage bands with densely packed fracture pieces. The continuous widening of the damage bands through progressive microfracture of branches at the boundaries contributes to the observed high plateau stress during compression, thereby contributing to its high energy absorption (17.7 kJ/kg), which is comparable and even greater than many synthetic metal- and polymer-based foams. Lastly, this thesis leads to the discovery of a unique dual-scale single-crystalline porous lattice structure (porosity: 50 vol%, constituent material: 99 wt% calcite) in the ossicles of P. nodosus. At the atomic level, the ossicle is composed of single-crystal biogenic calcite. At the lattice level, the ossicle's microstructure organizes as a diamond-triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS) structure. Moreover, the crystallographic axes at atomic and lattice levels are aligned, i.e., the c-axis of calcite is aligned with the [111] direction of the diamond-TPMS lattice. This single crystallinity co-alignment at two levels mitigates the compliance of calcite in the c-axis direction by utilizing the stiff <111> direction of the diamond-TPMS lattice. Furthermore, 3D in-situ mechanical characterizations reveal that the presence of crystal defects such as 60° and screw dislocations at the lattice level suppresses slip-like fracture along the {111} planes of the calcitic diamond-TPMS lattice upon loading, achieving an enhanced energy absorption capability. Even though the skeleton of echinoderm is made up of single-crystal calcite, the structure fractures in a conchoidal manner rather than along the clipping plane, which can continuously fracture the fragments into small pieces and enhance energy dissipation.