Ultralight Metallic Microlattices

Tobias A. Schaedler(HRL Laboratories (United States)), A. J. Jacobsen(HRL Laboratories (United States)), Anna Torrents(University of California, Irvine), Adam Sorensen(HRL Laboratories (United States)), Jie Lian(California Institute of Technology), Julia R. Greer(California Institute of Technology), Lorenzo Valdevit(University of California, Irvine), W. B. Carter(HRL Laboratories (United States))
Science
November 17, 2011
Cited by 1,731

Abstract

Ultralight (<10 milligrams per cubic centimeter) cellular materials are desirable for thermal insulation; battery electrodes; catalyst supports; and acoustic, vibration, or shock energy damping. We present ultralight materials based on periodic hollow-tube microlattices. These materials are fabricated by starting with a template formed by self-propagating photopolymer waveguide prototyping, coating the template by electroless nickel plating, and subsequently etching away the template. The resulting metallic microlattices exhibit densities ρ ≥ 0.9 milligram per cubic centimeter, complete recovery after compression exceeding 50% strain, and energy absorption similar to elastomers. Young's modulus E scales with density as E ~ ρ(2), in contrast to the E ~ ρ(3) scaling observed for ultralight aerogels and carbon nanotube foams with stochastic architecture. We attribute these properties to structural hierarchy at the nanometer, micrometer, and millimeter scales.


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