the design and structure of warp knit auxetic fabrics
DESCRIPTION
Presentation at 44th International Congress of International Federation of Knitting Technologists at St-Petersburg, Russia. 2008TRANSCRIPT
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The Design and Structure of Warp Knit Auxetic Fabrics
Samuel C. Ugbolue, Steven B. Warner, Yong K. Kim, Qinguo Fan, Chen Lu Yang*, Olena Kyzymchuk** and Yani Feng (Graduate student)
Department of Materials and Textiles, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, MA 02747, USA
* Advanced Technology and Manufacturing Center, UMassD, USA
** Kyiv National University of Technologies and Design, Ukraine.
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WHAT IS AUXETIC STRUCTURE?
The Greek word auxetos means that which grows. Auxetic materials exhibit the unexpected feature of becoming
fatter when stretched and narrower when compressedIn other words, they exhibit a negative Poissons ratio.
Auxetic materials have been formed as polymer gels, carbon fiber composite laminates, metallic foams, honeycombs and microporous polymers as affine structures.
CONVENTIONAL AUXETIC(Positive Poisson's Ratio) (Negative Poisson's Ratio)
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Poissons Ratio is the ratio of transverse contraction strain to longitudinal
extension strain in the direction of stretching force
Typical Values of Poissons Ratio for various materials
Materials Poissons ratio Materials Poissons ratio
Rubbers 0.5 Typical polymer foams 0.1-0.4
Soft biological tissues 0.5 Polyester 0.37-0.44
Lead 0.45 Nylon 6.6 0.41
Aluminum 0.33 Acrylic 0.37-0.45
Common Steels 0.27 Cork Nearly zero
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A whole range of synthetic auxetic materials, including carbon fiber composites, honeycomb structures and microporous
polymers have been produced
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The multifilament construction Ken Evans and Patrick Hook, the University Exeter
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MOTIVATION FOR DEVELOPING AUXETIC TEXTILES
The use of auxetic materials has been limited because of problems with deploying them in their fabricated forms.
Auxetic fibers in an engineered textile structure will exhibit the very unusual, interesting and useful property of becoming wider when stretched and thinner when compressed. Such a process will revolutionize the protective clothing industry.
The novel fabrics will offer improved shear stiffness, increased plane strain fracture toughness and increased indentation resistance.
In terms of cost and performance, the new auxetic textiles will be technically superior and environmentally viable, providing United States companies with a competitive advantage.
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POTENTIAL APPLICATIONS
Auxetic yarns and filaments could be used for sutures and fiber-reinforced composite applications.
Auxetic structures could be used as composite materials, personal protective appliances, fibrous materials and biomedical filtration materials.
As textile structures for bandages for compression therapy (where the bandage would react to compress swelling of the limb while also improving breathability as required).
The use of auxetic filaments, yarns or fabric structures to deliver active agents as intelligent textiles having anti- inflammatory, anti-odor, or drug-release capabilities.
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Objectives The main objective of this research is to study how fabric
geometry and structural design can be integrated to engineer novel auxetic warp knit fabrics.
The technical approaches are to:
1.Design and investigate warp knitted structures as auxetic textiles offering optimum performance.
2. Investigate the influence of knitting parameters such as tension, cover factor and stitch density on the mechanical performance of the developed auxetic structures;
3. Develop appropriate models and validate with experimental data for the developed auxetic structures.
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DESIGN of AUXETIC WARP KNITS
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The warp knit structures formed by wales of chain and inlay yarns
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The model of auxetic structure IFor the system, the strains in the
Oxi directions (i=1,2) for the modes of deformation are given by:
where X1 and X2 are dimensions of the unit cell along the Ox1 and Ox2 directions which are given by:
The analytical equation for the Poissons ratio is:
1 ( 1, 2)ii
dX d iX d
1
2
2 sin2( cos )
X lX h l
2 1
1 2
tanxyXX
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The fillet knitting structure with inlay yarns
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The model of auxetic structure IIThe principal assumptions for the
deformation are: the angles between ribs deform elastically; no change of length of the individual ribs is allowed; the translational symmetry of the net is kept throughout deformation.
The engineering strain of such model:
1cos
1cos4
00
00
krx
1
sinsin
40
ny r
000
00000
cossinsinsincos1cos
n
yxk
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The in-lay warp knit Auxetic structure
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FABRIC PRODUCTION
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Knitting machine
Jakob Muller Crochet Knitting machine (RD3MT3/630) equipped with 8 guide bars is used in this study to produce fabric samples of 10wpi, 630 millimeters wide.
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Materials Structure I
PolyesterThe linear density is 250 den x 2. It is manufactured by DuPont.
Polyester / Spandex96 filaments of polyester are wrapped with 1 end Spandex. The linear density of polyester is 150 den, while that of Spandex is 40den. The yarn is supplied by Unifi Inc
Structure II
PolyesterThe linear density is 250 den x 2. It is manufactured by DuPont.
NomexThe linear density is 200 den x 2.
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EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
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The methodology for measuring the Poissons ratio of the fabrics
Videoextensometry along with micro-tensile testing were used:
Instron 5569 Mechanical Tester ASTM D5034-95(2001) for Breaking Strength and Elongation of Textile Fabrics (Grab Test) is followed.
Sensicamera QE has high resolution (1376 x 1040 pixel).
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Poissons ratio test results of the fillet knitting structure with inlay yarns
Photo of initial Photo of specimen specimen during test
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-0,6
-0,5
-0,4
-0,3
-0,2
-0,1
0
0,1
0,2
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Strain, %
P
o
i
s
s
o
n
r
a
t
i
o
123Average
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Min Poissons ratio of fillet warp knit structures (wales direction)
3
5 1
2
3
-0,6
-0,5
-0,4
-0,3
-0,2
-0,1
0
- Ex/Ey
Number of chain courses
Number of tricot courses
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Poissons ratio test results of the in-lay warp knit Auxetic structure
Photo of specimen during test
Photo of initial specimen
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Conclusion Poissons ratio test results of auxetic warp knitted
structures indicate that auxetic properties are achieved in all structures.
Further studies on the influence of knit parameters such as tension, architecture and cover factor/density on the mechanical performance of the auxetic structures are in progress.
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REFERENCES Andy Alderson, Kim Alderson, Expanding materials and applications: exploiting auxetic
textiles, Technical Textiles International, 777, September 2005, 29-34. Ravirala N., Alderson K., Davies P., Simkins V., Alderson A., Negative Poissons ratio
polyester fibers, Textile Research Journal, 2006, 76(7), 540-546. Philip J. McMullan, Satish Kumar, Anselm C. Griffin, Textile Fibres Engineered from
Molecular Auxetic Polymers, Project M04-GT21 National Textile Center, Annual Report 2006, p1-10.
Mouritz A., Bannister M., Falson P., Leong K., Review of applications for advanced three dimensional fibre textile composites, Composites. Part : Applied Science and Manufacturing, 1999, 30, 1445-1461.
Smith C., Grima J., Evans K., A novel mechanism for generating auxetic behaviour in reticulated foam: Missing rib foam model, Acta Materiala, 2000, 48, 4349-4356.
Leong K., Ramakrishna S., Huang Z., Bibo G., The potential of knitting for engineering composites, Composites. Part A, 2000, 31, 197-220.
B. Gommers, I. Verpoest , P. Van Houtte, Analysis of knitted fabric reinforced composites: Part I. Fibre orientation distribution, Composites. Part : Applied Science and Manufacturing, 1998, 29, 1579-1588.
Rangaswamy Venkatraj, Net Fabrics. The Indian Textile Journal, 1996, Sept., 46-51. Whitty J.P.M., Alderson A., Myler P., Kandola B., Towards the design of sandwich panel
composites with enhanced mechanical and thermal properties by variation of the in-plane Poissons ratios. Composites. Part : Applied Science and Manufacturing, 2003, 34, 525- 534.
Gaspar N., Ren X.J., Smith C.W., Grima J.N., Evans K.E., Novel honeycombs with auxetic behaviour, Acta Materiala, 2005, 53, 2439-2445.
Ugbolue, S.C., Warner, S. B., Kim, Y.K., Fan, Q., and Yang, Chen Lu, The Formation and Performance of Auxetic Textiles, NTC Project F06-MD09 , National Textile Center Annual Report, November 2006.
Ugbolue, S.C., Warner, S. B., Kim, Y.K., Fan, Q., and Yang, Chen Lu, Olena Kyzymchuk and Yani Feng, The Formation and Performance of Auxetic Textiles, NTC Project F06- MD09 , National Textile Center Annual Report, September 2007.
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Thanks!
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The Design and Structure of Warp Knit Auxetic FabricsSamuel C. Ugbolue, Steven B. Warner, Yong K. Kim, Qinguo Fan, Chen Lu Yang*, Olena Kyzymchuk** and Yani Feng (Graduate student)Department of Materials and Textiles, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, MA 02747, USA* Advanced Technology and Manufacturing Center, UMassD, USA ** Kyiv National University of Technologies and Design, Ukraine.WHAT IS AUXETIC STRUCTURE?Poissons Ratio is the ratio of transverse contraction strain to longitudinal extension strain in the direction of stretching forceA whole range of synthetic auxetic materials, including carbon fiber composites, honeycomb structures and microporous polymers have been producedThe multifilament construction Ken Evans and Patrick Hook, the University Exeter MOTIVATION FOR DEVELOPING AUXETIC TEXTILESPOTENTIAL APPLICATIONSObjectivesDESIGN of AUXETIC WARP KNITSThe warp knit structures formed by wales of chain and inlay yarnsThe model of auxetic structure IThe fillet knitting structure with inlay yarns The model of auxetic structure IIThe in-lay warp knit Auxetic structure FABRIC PRODUCTIONKnitting machineMaterialsEXPERIMENTAL RESULTSThe methodology for measuring the Poissons ratio of the fabricsPoissons ratio test results of the fillet knitting structure with inlay yarns 21Min Poissons ratio of fillet warp knit structures (wales direction)Poissons ratio test results of the in-lay warp knit Auxetic structure ConclusionREFERENCES 26 27