![]() |
January 28, 2025 | Volume 21 Issue 04 |
Manufacturing Center
Product Spotlight
Modern Applications News
Metalworking Ideas For
Today's Job Shops
Tooling and Production
Strategies for large
metalworking plants
Carbon nanolattices -- 3D printed with designs optimized by machine learning -- could benefit industries from automotive to aerospace.
Researchers at the University of Toronto's Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering have used machine learning to design nano-architected materials that have the strength of carbon steel but the lightness of Styrofoam.
In a new paper published in Advanced Materials, a team led by Professor Tobin Filleter describes how they made nanomaterials with properties that offer a conflicting combination of exceptional strength, light weight, and customizability. The approach could benefit a wide range of industries, from automotive to aerospace.
From left to right: An image of the full lattice geometry is juxtaposed with an 18.75-million cell lattice floating on a bubble. [Credit: Photos by Peter Serles/University of Toronto Engineering]
"Nano-architected materials combine high-performance shapes, like making a bridge out of triangles, at nanoscale sizes, which takes advantage of the 'smaller is stronger' effect to achieve some of the highest strength-to-weight and stiffness-to-weight ratios of any material," says Peter Serles, the first author of the new paper.
"However, the standard lattice shapes and geometries used tend to have sharp intersections and corners, which leads to the problem of stress concentrations. This results in early local failure and breakage of the materials, limiting their overall potential.
"As I thought about this challenge, I realized that it is a perfect problem for machine learning to tackle."
Nano-architected materials are made of tiny building blocks or repeating units measuring a few hundred nanometers in size -- it would take more than 100 of them patterned in a row to reach the thickness of a human hair. These building blocks, which in this case are composed of carbon, are arranged in complex 3D structures called nanolattices.
To design their improved materials, Serles and Filleter worked with Professor Seunghwa Ryu and PhD student Jinwook Yeo at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology (KAIST) in Daejeon, South Korea. This partnership was initiated through the University of Toronto's International Doctoral Clusters program, which supports doctoral training through research engagement with international collaborators.
The KAIST team employed the multi-objective Bayesian optimization machine learning algorithm. This algorithm learned from simulated geometries to predict the best possible geometries for enhancing stress distribution and improving the strength-to-weight ratio of nano-architected designs.
Serles then used a two-photon polymerization 3D printer housed in the Center for Research and Application in Fluidic Technologies (CRAFT) to create prototypes for experimental validation. This additive manufacturing technology enables 3D printing at the micro and nano scale, creating optimized carbon nanolattices.
These optimized nanolattices more than doubled the strength of existing designs, withstanding a stress of 2.03 megapascals for every cubic meter per kilogram of its density, which is about five times higher than titanium.
"This is the first time machine learning has been applied to optimize nano-architected materials, and we were shocked by the improvements," says Serles. "It didn't just replicate successful geometries from the training data; it learned from what changes to the shapes worked and what didn't, enabling it to predict entirely new lattice geometries.
"Machine learning is normally very data intensive, and it's difficult to generate a lot of data when you're using high-quality data from finite element analysis. But the multi-objective Bayesian optimization algorithm only needed 400 data points, whereas other algorithms might need 20,000 or more. So, we were able to work with a much smaller -- but an extremely high-quality -- data set."
"We hope that these new material designs will eventually lead to ultra-lightweight components in aerospace applications, such as planes, helicopters, and spacecraft that can reduce fuel demands during flight while maintaining safety and performance," says Filleter. "This can ultimately help reduce the high carbon footprint of flying."
"For example, if you were to replace components made of titanium on a plane with this material, you would be looking at fuel savings of 80 liters per year for every kilogram of material you replace," adds Serles.
"Our next steps will focus on further improving the scale up of these material designs to enable cost-effective, macroscale components," says Filleter. "In addition, we will continue to explore new designs that push the material architectures to even lower density while maintaining high strength and stiffness."
Source: University of Toronto Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering
Published January 2025