The in-plane dynamic crushing behaviors and energy-absorbed characteristics of honeycombs with negative Poisson’s ratio (NPR) have been studied by means of explicit dynamic finite element analysis (DFEA) using ANSYS/LS-DYNA. First, the honeycomb models filled with different reentrant cells by the variation of micro-cell configuration parameters (cell-wall angle and shape ratio) are established. The respective influences of micro-structure and impact velocities on the deformation behaviors, the dynamic plateau stresses and the absorbed energy of reentrant honeycombs are explored in detail. It is shown that owing to the variation of cell micro-structure, reentrant honeycombs display different macro-/micro- deformation properties during the crushing. For the given impact velocity, the dynamic plateau stresses are related to the shape ratio by a power law and to the cell-wall angle by least-square curves. And they are also proportional to the square of impact velocities for a high impact velocity. Based on the finite element simulated results and one-dimensional shock wave theory, an empirical formula for auxetic honeycomb to predict the dynamic plateau stress is derived in terms of relative density and impact velocity.
A tradeoff exists between lower loads in passive tissues (i.e., tissue risk of failure) and higher stability margins as both increase with greater muscle coactivation. Greater muscle activity observed under load held in front did not necessarily yield larger stability margin as the position of load appeared to play an important role as well. The strength of the proposed model is in realistic consideration of both passive-active structures under postures and gravity/external loads, yielding results that satisfy kinematics, equilibrium, and stability requirements in all directions along the spine.
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