DMREF/Collaborative Research: Iterative Design and Fabrication of Hyperuniform-Inspired Materials for Targeted Mechanical and Transport Properties
DMREF/合作研究:针对目标机械和传输性能的超均匀材料的迭代设计和制造
基本信息
- 批准号:2323341
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 98.29万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Standard Grant
- 财政年份:2023
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2023-12-01 至 2027-11-30
- 项目状态:未结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
Micro-lattice and nano-lattice structures are an exciting class of materials with better strength-to-weight and stiffness-to-weight ratios than bulk solids. Many designs and additive-manufacturing approaches (i.e., 3D printing) have emerged recently for creating such materials, with the goal of fabricating commercially available products with optimized mechanical, thermal, acoustic, and electrical properties for biomedical, aerospace, and several other applications. This Designing Materials to Revolutionize and Engineer our Future (DMREF) grant will support development of novel approaches to design a new class of disordered lattice materials that are inspired by the special transport properties, e.g., heat transfer and diffusion, of the so-called “hyperuniform” structures. Hyperuniform materials may nominally be described as materials with minimal density variation as the length scale increases. They arise naturally in biological and chemical systems and can be designed through numerical methods. Numerous studies have demonstrated that such systems facilitate efficient transport behavior with minimal attenuation while also possessing nearly optimal effective elastic stiffness and material fracture suppression. The grant will also provide effective workforce development for a diverse group of undergraduates, PhD students, and postdoctoral researchers in the multidisciplinary areas of engineering, materials science, mathematics, and physics. It will contribute to the public understanding of materials research via publications, outreach, and internship programs for high-school students and teachers. Additionally, there will be an effort to develop entrepreneurship and trainees will be supported in pursuing commercialization of their ideas. The objective of this project is to engineer a new class of ultralight, manufacturable materials with jointly optimized mechanical (stiffness and strength) and transport (thermal, acoustic, and electrical) properties. To achieve this, the approach includes (1) characterization and understanding of the benefits of exploiting local uniformity and hyperuniformity; (2) measurement of mechanical and transport properties to create and understand the structure–process–property diagram for these materials, including the influence of heterogeneity and defects; and (3) development of new computational tools that allow optimization throughout the integrated theory, synthesis, and experiment loop of material development. The research activities will pursue three routes for property co-optimization: (1) adjustments to the initial configuration, including connectivity (theory); (2) material selection and control of microscale heterogeneity that is created by the additive-manufacturing process (synthesis); (3) designing time-varying signals that create specified spatial correlations when applied to structures (experiment). The approach will also include new modeling approaches, such as network analysis to create design heuristics and higher-order stochastic spatial-averaging techniques to account for microscale heterogeneity. These models will efficiently feed back into the design process by allowing the creation of random-network models that generate specific features that also remain manufacturable. The design cycle that forms the basis of the research aims draws heavily on building a shared Configuration Library and Code Library; these will be published for use by other research groups. This project is supported by the Division of Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation (CMMI) of the Directorate for Engineering (ENG) and the Division of Mathematical Sciences (DMS) and the Division of Materials Research (DMR) of the Directorate for Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MPS).This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
微晶格和纳米晶格结构是一类令人兴奋的材料,具有比块状固体更好的强度重量比和刚度重量比,最近出现了许多设计和增材制造方法(即 3D 打印)。此类材料的目标是制造具有优化的机械、热、声学和电性能的商用产品,用于生物医学、航空航天和其他一些应用,这种设计材料将彻底改变和设计我们的未来。 (DMREF) 拨款将支持开发新方法来设计新型无序晶格材料,这些材料的灵感来自于所谓的“超均匀”结构的特殊传输特性,例如传热和扩散。它们被描述为随着长度尺度的增加而密度变化的材料。它们自然出现在生物和化学系统中,并且可以通过数值方法进行设计,大量研究表明,此类系统可以以最小的衰减促进有效的传输行为,同时也具有几乎最小的衰减。该赠款还将为工程、材料科学、数学和物理学等多学科领域的本科生、博士生和博士后研究人员提供有效的劳动力发展。通过出版物、外展和高中生和教师的实习计划来了解材料研究。此外,还将努力发展创业精神,并支持学员将其想法商业化。该项目的目标是进行工程设计。新型超轻,具有联合优化的机械(刚度和强度)和传输(热、声和电)特性的可制造材料为了实现这一目标,该方法包括(1)表征和理解利用局部均匀性和超均匀性的好处;(2)测量。机械和传输特性,以创建和理解这些材料的结构-过程-特性图,包括异质性和缺陷的影响;(3) 开发新的计算工具,允许在整个综合理论、合成和实验循环中进行优化。研究活动将追求属性协同优化的三种途径:(1)调整初始配置,包括连通性(理论);(2)材料选择和增材制造产生的微观异质性的控制。过程(综合);(3)设计时变信号,在应用于结构时创建指定的空间相关性(实验)。该方法还将包括新的建模方法,例如用于创建设计启发式和高阶随机性的网络分析。这些模型将通过允许创建随机网络模型来有效地反馈到设计过程中,这些模型可以生成仍可制造的特定特征,从而构成研究目标的基础。重点是建立一个共享的配置库和代码库;这些将被发布以供其他研究小组使用,该项目得到了工程局 (ENG) 土木、机械和制造创新部 (CMMI) 的支持。数学科学系(DMS) 和数学与物理科学理事会 (MPS) 的材料研究部 (DMR)。该奖项反映了 NSF 的法定使命,并通过使用基金会的智力价值和更广泛的影响审查标准进行评估,被认为值得支持。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Karen Daniels其他文献
Impact of the COVID-19 nonpharmaceutical interventions on influenza and other respiratory viral infections in New Zealand
COVID-19 非药物干预措施对新西兰流感和其他呼吸道病毒感染的影响
- DOI:
10.1101/2020.11.11.20228692 - 发表时间:
2020-11-13 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Sue Huang;T. Wood;L. Jelley;Tineke Jennings;Sarah Jeffries;Karen Daniels;A. Nesdale;T. Dowell - 通讯作者:
T. Dowell
' s response to reviews Title : Translating research into maternal health care policy : a qualitative case study of the use of evidence in policies for the treatment of eclampsia and pre-eclampsia in South Africa
对评论的回应标题:将研究转化为孕产妇保健政策:南非子痫和先兆子痫治疗政策中证据使用的定性案例研究
- DOI:
- 发表时间:
2024-09-14 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Karen Daniels;Simon Lewin;Karen Daniels;Simon Lewin - 通讯作者:
Simon Lewin
Movement, meaning and affect: the stuff childhood literacies are made of
动作、意义和情感:童年识字的组成部分
- DOI:
- 发表时间:
2018 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Karen Daniels - 通讯作者:
Karen Daniels
Children's experiences of corporal punishment: A qualitative study in an urban township of South Africa.
儿童体罚经历:南非城镇的定性研究。
- DOI:
- 发表时间:
2015 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Alison Breen;Karen Daniels;M. Tomlinson - 通讯作者:
M. Tomlinson
Vanadium-catalyzed epoxidations. 2. Highly stereoselective epoxidations of acyclic homoallylic alcohols predicted by a detailed transition-state model
钒催化的环氧化反应。
- DOI:
10.1021/ja00415a067 - 发表时间:
1981-12-01 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:15
- 作者:
E. D. Mihelich;Karen Daniels;D. Eickhoff - 通讯作者:
D. Eickhoff
Karen Daniels的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Karen Daniels', 18)}}的其他基金
Collaborative Research: RUI: Density of Modes: A New Way to Forecast Sediment Failure
合作研究:RUI:模式密度:预测沉积物破坏的新方法
- 批准号:
2244615 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 98.29万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Mechanics of Granular Materials: Rigidity, Nonlocality, and Activated Failure
颗粒材料力学:刚性、非局域性和激活失效
- 批准号:
2104986 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 98.29万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
PREEVENTS Track 2: Collaborative Research: Defining precursors of ground failure: a multiscale framework for early landslide prediction through geomechanics and remote sensing
预防事件轨道 2:协作研究:定义地面破坏的前兆:通过地质力学和遥感进行早期滑坡预测的多尺度框架
- 批准号:
1854977 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 98.29万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
Travel Support for International Focus Workshop: Granular and Particulate Networks
国际焦点研讨会的差旅支持:细粒度和微粒网络
- 批准号:
1931158 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 98.29万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Wetting and Spreading with Soft Materials
用软材料润湿和铺展
- 批准号:
1608097 - 财政年份:2016
- 资助金额:
$ 98.29万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
2012 Granular and Granular-Fluid Flow GRC to be held July 22 - 27, 2012 at Davidson College in Davidson, NC
2012 年粒状和粒状流体流动 GRC 将于 2012 年 7 月 22 日至 27 日在北卡罗来纳州戴维森的戴维森学院举行
- 批准号:
1239081 - 财政年份:2012
- 资助金额:
$ 98.29万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Workshop Support for "Particulate Matter: Does Dimensionality Matter?"; Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems; Dresden, Germany
研讨会支持“颗粒物质:维度重要吗?”;
- 批准号:
1019151 - 财政年份:2010
- 资助金额:
$ 98.29万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
CAREER: State Variables in Granular Materials
职业:颗粒材料的状态变量
- 批准号:
0644743 - 财政年份:2007
- 资助金额:
$ 98.29万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
Verification of Properties of Geometric Structures and Reconstruction of Geometric Objectsfrom Partial Information
几何结构性质的验证和从部分信息重建几何对象
- 批准号:
0310589 - 财政年份:2003
- 资助金额:
$ 98.29万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
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Collaborative Research: DMREF: AI-enabled Automated design of ultrastrong and ultraelastic metallic alloys
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2323118 - 财政年份:2023
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合作研究:DMREF:De Novo 蛋白质作为聚合物网络中的连接点
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