APP-PHLGDec 22, 2022

Deep learning for size-agnostic inverse design of random-network 3D printed mechanical metamaterials

Tencent
arXiv:2212.12047v175 citationsh-index: 81
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of designing practical, fatigue-resistant mechanical metamaterials for real-world applications, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing methods like CVAE and FE simulations.

The paper tackled the multi-objective inverse design problem for random-network 3D printed mechanical metamaterials, aiming to find microarchitectures with desired elastic properties and minimized peak stresses for specific sizes, and proposed Deep-DRAM, a modular framework combining deep learning and simulations to generate multiple candidate designs.

Practical applications of mechanical metamaterials often involve solving inverse problems where the objective is to find the (multiple) microarchitectures that give rise to a given set of properties. The limited resolution of additive manufacturing techniques often requires solving such inverse problems for specific sizes. One should, therefore, find multiple microarchitectural designs that exhibit the desired properties for a specimen with given dimensions. Moreover, the candidate microarchitectures should be resistant to fatigue and fracture, meaning that peak stresses should be minimized as well. Such a multi-objective inverse design problem is formidably difficult to solve but its solution is the key to real-world applications of mechanical metamaterials. Here, we propose a modular approach titled 'Deep-DRAM' that combines four decoupled models, including two deep learning models (DLM), a deep generative model (DGM) based on conditional variational autoencoders (CVAE), and direct finite element (FE) simulations. Deep-DRAM (deep learning for the design of random-network metamaterials) integrates these models into a unified framework capable of finding many solutions to the multi-objective inverse design problem posed here. The integrated framework first introduces the desired elastic properties to the DGM, which returns a set of candidate designs. The candidate designs, together with the target specimen dimensions are then passed to the DLM which predicts their actual elastic properties considering the specimen size. After a filtering step based on the closeness of the actual properties to the desired ones, the last step uses direct FE simulations to identify the designs with the minimum peak stresses.

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