4.8 Article

Pangolin-Inspired Stretchable, Microwave-Invisible Metascale

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 33, Issue 41, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202102131

Keywords

conformability; microwave absorption; nondevelopable surfaces; penetration resistance; stretchable absorbers

Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of Education [MOE2017-T2-2-107, MOE2019-T2-2-022]
  2. National Research Foundation (NRF), Prime Minister's Office, Singapore [NRF-NRFI2017-07]

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This study proposes a novel soft-rigid-connection strategy inspired by the pangolin to design a stretchable metamaterial, PIMS, consisting of EMD-scale and elastomer. The device demonstrates robust microwave-absorbing capacity and superior stretchability, with the RCS reduction performance significantly outperforming conventional devices on nondevelopable surfaces. This conceptually novel platform provides a new approach for developing stretchable, nondevelopable surface conformable functional devices.
Microwave-invisible devices are emerging as a valuable technology in various applications, including soft robotics, shape-morphing structures, and textural camouflages, especially in electronic countermeasures. Unfortunately, conventional microwave-absorbing metastructures and bulk absorbers are stretching confined, limiting their application in deformable or special-shaped targets. To overcome such limitations, a conceptually novel soft-rigid-connection strategy, inspired by the pangolin, is proposed. Pangolin-inspired metascale (PIMS), which is a kind of stretchable metamaterial consisting of an electromagnetic dissipative scale (EMD-scale) and elastomer, is rationally designed. Such a device exhibits robust microwave-absorbing capacity under the interference of 50% stretching. Besides, profiting from the covering effect and size-confined effect of EMD-scale, the out-of-plane indentation failure force of PIMS is at least 5 times larger than conventional device. As a proof of concept, the proposed device is conformally pasted on nondevelopable surfaces. For a spherical dome surface, the maximum radar cross-section (RCS) reduction of PIMS is 6.3 dB larger than that of a conventional device, while for a saddle surface, the bandwidth of 10 dB RCS reduction exhibits an increase of 83%. In short, this work provides a conceptually novel platform to develop stretchable, nondevelopable surface conformable functional devices.

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