Using origami design principles to fold reprogrammable mechanical metamaterials

Jesse L. Silverberg(Cornell University), Arthur A. Evans(University of Massachusetts Amherst), Lauren McLeod(Cornell University), Ryan C. Hayward(University of Massachusetts Amherst), Thomas C. Hull(Western New England University), Christian D. Santangelo(University of Massachusetts Amherst), Itai Cohen(Cornell University)
Science
August 7, 2014
Cited by 964

Abstract

Although broadly admired for its aesthetic qualities, the art of origami is now being recognized also as a framework for mechanical metamaterial design. Working with the Miura-ori tessellation, we find that each unit cell of this crease pattern is mechanically bistable, and by switching between states, the compressive modulus of the overall structure can be rationally and reversibly tuned. By virtue of their interactions, these mechanically stable lattice defects also lead to emergent crystallographic structures such as vacancies, dislocations, and grain boundaries. Each of these structures comes from an arrangement of reversible folds, highlighting a connection between mechanical metamaterials and programmable matter. Given origami's scale-free geometric character, this framework for metamaterial design can be directly transferred to milli-, micro-, and nanometer-size systems.


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