Numerical Study on Helical Fiber Fragmentation in Chiral Biological Materials
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Date
Authors
Wang, Jian-Shan
Yuan, L
Wang, Lixin
Cui, Yuhong
Qin, Qinghua
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Tianjin Daxue/Tianjin University
Abstract
Chiral microstructures exist widely in natural
biological materials such as wood, bone, and climbing
tendrils. The helical shape of such microstructures plays an
important role in stress transfer between fiber and matrix,
and in the mechanical properties of biological materials. In
this paper, helical fiber fragmentation behavior is studied
numerically using the finite-element method (FEM), and
then, the effects of helical shape on fiber deformation and
fracture, and the corresponding mechanical mechanisms
are investigated. The results demonstrate that, to a large
degree, the initial microfibril angle (MFA) determines the
elastic deformation and fracture behavior of fibers. For
fibers with a large MFA, the interfacial area usually has
large values, inducing a relatively low fragment density
during fiber fragmentation. This work may be helpful in
understanding the relationship between microstructure and
mechanical property in biological materials, and in the
design and fabrication of bio-inspired advanced functional
materials.
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Transactions of Tianjin University
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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