Hinged Adaptive Fiber-Rubber Composites Driven by Shape Memory Alloys—Development and Simulation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. State of the Art
1.1.1. Shape Memory Alloys
- One Way Shape Memory Effect (OWSME)
- Two Way Shape Memory Effect (TWSME)
1.1.2. Hinged Actuation Mechanisms
1.1.3. Knitted Fiber-Reinforced Rubbers
1.1.4. Simulation Model
- Geometry and mesh: The model consists of a silicone block with cavities for the reinforcement fibers and SMA wire. The reinforcement fibers in the weft direction are modeled as cylinders with elliptical cross-sections and the SMA wires are modeled as a cylinder with circular cross-sections. The thin PTFE tube (cf. Section 1.1.3) surrounding the SMA wires within the specimens is neglected in the model, since stiffness is low and has no significant influence on the bending stiffness. Instead, the cylindrical cavity in the silicone is assigned the diameter of the PTFE tubes, in order to replicate the contact interactions of the wires with the tube. The reinforcement fibers in the warp direction are neglected in the geometry modeling, assuming that their influence on the bending stiffness is captured by calibration with experimental bending test data. All components are meshed with hexagonal 3D elements. The meshes of the fibers share the nodes coinciding with the silicone at their respective interfaces, assuming an ideal interface bonding. In order to reduce modeling effort as well as improve convergence behavior, symmetry is utilized. For this, it is assumed that the force transduced by the SMA wires is distributed evenly across the reinforcement fibers within the specimen. Thus, a specimen with four SMA wires and 24 reinforcement fibers is reduced to one SMA wire and 6 reinforcement fibers.
- Material modeling: The fiber material is modeled using an orthotropic elastic material model, with stiffness parameters determined by calibration with four-point bending test data of the composite material. The rubber material is modeled with a hyperelastic material model by Yeoh et al. [24], which was fitted to experimental data from tensile tests of rubber specimens. The SMA material is modeled with a thermomechanical material model based on the work of Auricchio and Souza [25,26]. The material parameters were obtained from thermomechanical test data of the SMA material. Tensile tests at room temperature and above Af, DSC measurements and isobaric contraction measurements were conducted for the characterization. The model requires pre-stretching by a virtual force in a preliminary load step in order to exhibit the shape memory effect used for actuation.
- Boundary conditions: The SMA wire interacts with its surrounding cavity through a frictionless contact boundary condition, emulating the smooth surface of the PTFE tube. A bonded contact boundary condition connects the free end of the SMA to an external fixation element. Another bonded contact boundary condition connects the fixation element itself to the silicone rubber. In order to account for the symmetry within the model, the side faces of the specimen are restricted from moving in a normal direction with a translational boundary condition.
- Loads: With a force of 15 N in the first load step, the SMA wire is pre-stretched. After stretching, the force load is discarded and a ramped temperature load is applied to the SMA geometry, initiating the contraction caused by the shape memory effect.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials
2.2. Concept Development for Hinged Structures
- Concept 1 (V1) has a low stiffness section (LSS) in the middle and two high stiffness sections (HSS) at the edges. Integrated SMA wires are spanning the full plate length, changing direction in turn-around curves at the end. During activation, the LSS is more prone to deformation due to its lower stiffness and therefore acts like a solid-body hinge.
- Concept 2 (V2) has two LSS, each flanked by HSS. Furthermore, SMA wires are integrated in sections, so that two strands with turn-around curves span the left LSS, the next two strands span the right LSS, and so on. Thus, the SMA wires can be activated independently, deforming either left, right or both LSSs of the structure, thus enabling intermediate deformation states.
- V1.1 with one hinge area and two layers of reinforcement fibers in the HSS in bending direction, as described in Section 2.3.1.
- V1.2 identical to V1.1 during the knitting process but with two additional layers of reinforcement fibers in its HSS added during the manufacturing of the composite. Thus, V1.2 will have twice the amount of reinforcement fibers in its HSS compared to V1.1.
2.3. Binding Development and Knitting Process
2.3.1. Binding Setup of V1
2.3.2. Binding Setup of V2
2.4. Composite Development and Characterization
2.5. Simulation Model Enhancements
2.6. Setup for Bending Deformation Tests by Thermal Activation of the SMA Actuators
- For V1, the voltage is set to 16 V, resulting in a current of ~2.0 A. The cycle time is set to 5 s for activation and 10 s for deactivation, with a total of five cycles.
- For V2, two modes are used:
- ○
- In mode A, both SMA wires are activated simultaneously with 14 V, resulting in a current of 2 A due to the shorter SMA wires of V2, with 5 s activation and 10 s deactivation.
- ○
- In mode B, the SMA wires are activated consecutively. The first SMA is activated for 20 s, the second SMA for 10 s, starting 10 s after activating the first. Then, both SMA are deactivated for 10 s.
3. Results
3.1. Knitting Results
3.2. Results of Bending Characterization Tests
3.3. Results of Bending Deformation Tests by Thermal Activation of the SMA Actuators
3.4. Simulation Model Calibration
3.5. Simulation Results
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Component | Property | Value |
---|---|---|
NiTi shape memory alloy wire * | Wire diameter (mm) | 0.305 |
Maximum actuation contraction | 0.2 | |
Forward transformation temperature range (°C) | 78.1–97.7 | |
Pretreatment | Pre-strained | |
Young’s modulus (GPa) | EM = 32.5 EA = 53.6 | |
Silicone rubber | Elastic modulus (MPa) | 1.1 |
Fracture stress (MPa) | 4.5 | |
Fracture strain (%) | 86.8 | |
Density (g/cm3) ** | 1.05 | |
Glass fiber yarn, 410 tex (GF-strong) | Elastic modulus (GPa) | 80.2 |
Yarn diameter (mm) | 1.4 | |
Yarn count/fineness (tex) | 410 | |
Density (g/cm3) | 2.6 | |
Glass fiber twisted twin-yarn, 2 × 136 tex *** (GF-faint) | Elastic modulus | 67.2 |
Yarn diameter (mm) | 0.4 | |
Yarn count/fineness (tex) | 2 × 136 | |
Density (g/cm3) | 2.6 |
Layer | Description |
---|---|
1 Vacuum foil | Seals the layup vacuum-tight |
2 Flow media | Supports the distribution of silicone and vacuum |
3 Peel ply | Detaches release film and specimen |
4 Reinforcement textile | Glass fiber knit cuttings |
5 Mold | Sheet metal |
Concept | Dimensions | Hinge Areas |
---|---|---|
V1 | 2.5 mm3 | 45 mm |
V2 | 2.5 mm3 | 25 mm |
Specimen | Max. Deformation Angle [°] |
---|---|
V1.1, one hinge | 41.0 |
V1.2, one hinge | 132.3 |
V2, two hinges | 75.5 |
Reference, no hinges | 23.8 |
Parameter | Value |
---|---|
[GPa] | 12.5 |
[GPa] | 0.04 |
[GPa] | 0.04 |
0.22 | |
0.22 | |
0.22 | |
[GPa] | 0.04 |
[GPa] | 0.02 |
[GPa] | 0.04 |
Parameter | Value |
---|---|
C10 (Pa) | 222,757.40564 |
C10 (Pa) | −42,093.2849079 |
C10 (Pa) | 46,135.0702147 |
d1 (Pa−1) | 0 |
d2 (Pa−1) | 0 |
d3 (Pa−1) | 0 |
Specimen | Maximum Deformation Angle, ° | |
---|---|---|
V1.1 | Simulation | 95.7 |
Experiment | 41.0 | |
V1.2 | Simulation | 108.2 |
Experiment | 132.3 | |
V2 | Simulation | 136.5 |
Experiment | 75.5 |
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Lohse, F.; Annadata, A.R.; Häntzsche, E.; Gereke, T.; Trümper, W.; Cherif, C. Hinged Adaptive Fiber-Rubber Composites Driven by Shape Memory Alloys—Development and Simulation. Materials 2022, 15, 3830. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15113830
Lohse F, Annadata AR, Häntzsche E, Gereke T, Trümper W, Cherif C. Hinged Adaptive Fiber-Rubber Composites Driven by Shape Memory Alloys—Development and Simulation. Materials. 2022; 15(11):3830. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15113830
Chicago/Turabian StyleLohse, Felix, Achyuth Ram Annadata, Eric Häntzsche, Thomas Gereke, Wolfgang Trümper, and Chokri Cherif. 2022. "Hinged Adaptive Fiber-Rubber Composites Driven by Shape Memory Alloys—Development and Simulation" Materials 15, no. 11: 3830. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15113830
APA StyleLohse, F., Annadata, A. R., Häntzsche, E., Gereke, T., Trümper, W., & Cherif, C. (2022). Hinged Adaptive Fiber-Rubber Composites Driven by Shape Memory Alloys—Development and Simulation. Materials, 15(11), 3830. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15113830