Abstract
Architected piezoelectric materials with controlled porosity are of interest for applications such as hydrophones, miniature accelerometers, vibratory sensors, and contact microphones. Current analytical modeling approach cannot be readily applied to design architected periodic piezoelectric foams with tunable properties while exhibiting elastic anisotropy and piezoelectric activity. This study presents micromechanical-finite element (FE) models to characterize the electromechanical properties of architected piezoelectric foams. The microstructure with zero-dimension (3-0 foam, spherical porosity) and one-dimensional (3-1 foam, cylindrical porosity) connectivity were considered to analyze the effect of porosity connectivity on the performance of piezoelectric foam. 3D FE models of the 3-0 and 3-1 foams were developed and using the intrinsic symmetry of porous structures simplified mixed boundary conditions (MBCs) equivalent to periodic boundary conditions (PBC) were proposed. The proposed approach is simple and eliminates the need of tedious mesh generation process on opposite boundary faces on the micromechanical model of porous microstructures with PBCs. The results obtained from the proposed micromechanics-FE models were compared with those obtained by means of the analytical models based on micromechanics theories, and FE models with PBCs reported in the literature for both 3-0 and 3-1 type foams. An excellent agreement was observed. The computed effective elastic, piezoelectric and dielectric properties and corresponding figure of merit (FOM) revealed that piezoelectric foams with 3-0 connectivity exhibit enhanced hydrostatic FOM as compared to piezoelectric foams with 3-1 connectivity. It is concluded that spherical porosity is more suitable to hydrophone applications.
Original language | British English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1700-1712 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Journal of Intelligent Material Systems and Structures |
Volume | 32 |
Issue number | 15 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Sep 2021 |
Keywords
- architected porous materials
- electromechanical properties
- Finite element analysis
- piezoelectric materials
- unit cell method