Topology-Dependent Compression and Energy Absorption of 3D-Printed Resin Scaffolds Filled with Polyurethane Foam
Yi Jie, Yongcheng Hong, Yajiu ZhangLightweight resin lattice structures are prone to instability and failure under compressive loading, which leads to limited load bearing capacity and energy absorption performance. In this study, tough resin triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS) lattice scaffolds were fabricated using stereolithography-based 3D printing, and polyurethane foam (PUF) was subsequently infiltrated into three representative topologies, namely Schwarz Primitive (P), I-Wrapped Package (IWP), and Gyroid (G), to form interpenetrating phase composites (IPC). Quasi-static compression results show that PUF infiltration significantly improves the compressive response of all IPC architectures. The stress level in the plateau region is increased, while the magnitude of local stress drops is reduced, leading to a more stable progressive compression behavior. By comparing the stress–strain responses of IPC with the linear superposition of the pure resin scaffold and PUF phases, it is found that the actual energy absorption of IPC exceeds the predicted additive response, indicating a pronounced synergistic effect between the two phases. Among them, the IWP-based IPC achieves a specific energy absorption of 11.72 J/g. These results demonstrate that interpenetrating phase architectures can maintain lightweight characteristics while enhancing load bearing stability and energy absorption efficiency, providing useful guidance for topology selection and lightweight design of TPMS-based energy absorbing composite structures.