wiki:id:supported_materials
Supported Materials
Intact.design provides many material options, organized into six main groups:
- Ferrous metals
- Contain iron and are usually magnetic. Used for their high tensile strength and durability.
- Non-ferrous metals
- Lighter and more malleable than ferrous metals. These materials do not exhibit typical properties of metals such as hardness and conductivity.
- Non-metals
- Includes materials such as concrete, glass, and rubber.
- 3D printed plastics
- Inexpensive materials used in the 3D printing process.
- Engineering plastics
- Harder and more durable plastics than 3D printed ones
- Biological materials
- Different types of bones are currently supported
For a list of all the materials with their properties, download this excel sheet. In the Excel sheet, there are several lines to understand
- Material name
- Category: Ferrous metal, non-ferrous metal, non-metal, 3D printed plastic, engineering plastic (Organized by category in Intact.design)
- Failure criterion: a way to measure how and under what conditions a material will fail. Materials either fracture (brittle failure) or yield (ductile failure). There are several failure criterion methods for each type of failure.
- Density: defined by mass/volume
- Elastic modulus: derived from the linear (elastic) region of the stress-strain curve; a measure of a material’s resistance to being deformed when a force is applied to it.
- Poisson’s ratio: negative ratio of lateral strain to longitudinal strain.
- Yield Strength: stress at which a material begins to deform plastically
- Tensile Strength: the maximum stress a material can withstand before breaking while being pulled apart
- Compressive strength: the maximum stress a material can withstand before breaking when being compressed
wiki/id/supported_materials.txt · Last modified: 2018/08/28 08:53 by mike