4.7 Article

3D Weaving with Curved Ribbons

Journal

ACM TRANSACTIONS ON GRAPHICS
Volume 40, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
DOI: 10.1145/3450626.3459788

Keywords

weaving; physics-based simulation; numerical optimization; computational design; fabrication

Funding

  1. NCCR Digital Fabrication - Swiss National Science Foundation (NCCR Digital Fabrication) [51NF40-141853]
  2. SNF Award [FNS 514543 / CF 1156]

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The article discusses a method to construct arbitrary smooth free-form surface geometries by weaving optimized curved ribbons, validated through a series of physical prototypes. The approach is expected to significantly enhance the design capabilities of new woven structures.
Basket weaving is a traditional craft for creating curved surfaces as an interwoven array of thin, flexible, and initially straight ribbons. The three-dimensional shape of a woven structure emerges through a complex interplay of the elastic bending behavior of the ribbons and the contact forces at their crossings. Curvature can be injected by carefully placing topological singularities in the otherwise regular weaving pattern. However, shape control through topology is highly non-trivial and inherently discrete, which severely limits the range of attainable woven geometries. Here, we demonstrate how to construct arbitrary smooth free-form surface geometries by weaving carefully optimized curved ribbons. We present an optimization-based approach to solving the inverse design problem for such woven structures. Our algorithm computes the ribbons' planar geometry such that their interwoven assembly closely approximates a given target design surface in equilibrium. We systematically validate our approach through a series of physical prototypes to show a broad range of new woven geometries that is not achievable by existing methods. We anticipate our computational approach to significantly enhance the capabilities for the design of new woven structures. Facilitated by modern digital fabrication technology, we see potential applications in material science, bio- and mechanical engineering, art, design, and architecture.

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