Title: Graded Materials
1Graded Materials
- Graded Materials Very Common Nature
- Few Examples of Functionally Graded Materials in
Man-Made Assemblies
2Graded Materials
- SDM Allows Variability in Compliance and Damping
throughout a Candidate Design
3Shape Deposition Manufacturing
- Cycle of Material Deposition and Removal
- Complex 3D Geometry, Multi-materials
Deposit (part)
Shape
4DESIGN
PROCESSING
FABRICATION
5DESIGN
6Benefits of Graded Materials
- Rocker Pin Joints Replaced With Flexural Regions
to Introduce Compliance and Damping
SDM Re-Design
Original Design
- SDM with Graded Materials Allow Control of
Material Location and Properties in 3D geometry - With Graded Materials, Flexure Size Can Be
Increased To Increase Strength of Part
7Graded Materials
- Un-Actuated Five-Bar Leg Mechanism Illustrates
Benefits of Heterogeneous Material Properties - Flexure Joints Replace Pin-Joints to Add
Compliance and Damping
8Graded Materials
- Desired Performance of Structural and Flexural
Regions Very Different - Fabricating With Single Material Would Result In
Compliant Structural Regions or Brittle, Failure
Prone Flexures - Ideal Solution Requires Varying Material
Properties Between Different Regions of the Part
9Graded Materials
- Graded Interface Increases Surface Area,
Resulting in Increased Bonding - Mixing in Arbitrary Ratios Not Possible
- Function Needs to Be Applied To Discretize the
Graded Regions Based Upon a Specified Tolerance
Parameter
10Bonding
- Wet-Wet Bonds
- Excellent Bond
- Difficult To Control
- Avoid Over-mixing
- Wet-Dry Bonds
- Excellent Control of Surface
- Increase Surface Area
- Roughen Surface
- Keep Clean - machine as last step before new pour
if possible
Wet-Dry Bond
Wet-Wet Bond
11Material Selection
- Polyurethane (part)
- Hardness Machinable/Cast Only
- Bond Issues - cure time, shrinkage (s)
IE-90A
(Cast Only, Very Soft)
Harder
IE-65D
IE-70DC
12Material Selection
- Wax (support)
- Machinability
- Shrinkage
- Melting Point
Blue Wax
Palette Blocks Excellent Machinability
Red Wax
Castable Medium Machinability
Green Wax
Water Soluble Poor Machinability
13Design Constraints
Example of 2.5D/3D Geometry White Regions (Soft
Material) in 2.5D Clear Regions (Hard Material)
in 3D
Ordering Defined By Urethane Hardness. Processed
to Minimize Machining on Soft Surfaces
14Flexures
Minimize Sharp Edges
Plastic Fails in Tension
Increased Width
Materials
Maximize Bond Area
2.5D/3D
15PROCESSING FABRICATION
16Pouring Maintenance Technique
- Clean Technique
- Clear Division Between Clean and Unclean Objects
- Attire
- Dry Gas
Eye Protection
Mask
Lab Coat
Under Gloves
Outer Gloves
Toe-Covering Shoes
17Good Cures
- Aesthetic and Practical Importance
- Pre-vacuum
- Over Pour
- Cure Times
18Tolerance Issues
- Over Pour/Under Machine
- Excess Material Part Deformation and HAAS
Tolerance
19Processing
- Combine Differing Grades of Material Roughly in
Order of Hardness - Bond Surfaces Should be Freshly Machined
20Ideal Machining Parameters
- Please be Conservative (tool speeds very
approximate) - Cooling always provide direct cooling from
compressed air
- Cutting Depths Roughly Half Tool Diameter
- Feed Rates
- 1. 500-750mmpm 1/8 or larger
- 2. 200-400mmpm 1/16
Wet-Dry Bond
21Application of Graded Materials
- Berkeley 1 DOF Walking Machine
- Four-Bar Linkages Represent Practical Application
Well Suited to Use of Graded Materials
22Compliance for 1 DOF Machine
- Reduce Assembly Complexity, Increase Robustness
- Four-Bar Mechanism Utilizes Two Rotary Joints
and Two Rocker Joints - Rocker Pin Joints Replaced With Flexural Regions
to Introduce Compliance and Damping
Original Design
SDM Re-Design
23Compliance for 1DOF Machine
- New Design Features With SDM
- Geometry Constant Ground Contact
- Replaced Pin Joints With Flexural Region
Introduced Compliance Damping - Leg Preflexes Defines by Build Orientation
- Future Analysis and Experiments to Tune
Compliance to Locomotion
24Acknowledgements
Thanks to Prof. Mark Cutkosky, Prof. Fritz Prinz,
Sanjay Rajagopalan, Jorge Cham, Yanjie Sun,
Jianpeng Dong and Sangkyun Kang and the other
students and staff of RPL and CDR for their help
in generating the results described in this
presentation and Dr. Noe Lozano and the SURF
program for supporting this research.