4.8 Article

Curvature Induced by Deflection in Thick Meta-Plates

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 33, Issue 30, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202008082

Keywords

3D printing; auxeticity; functional materials; Gaussian curvature; mechanical metamaterials

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research through NWO-VIDI grant [680-47-548/983]
  2. French Agence Nationale de la Recherche, project SMART

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This study discusses the use of simple bending of metal plates to achieve various intrinsic curvatures, showing that different unit cell structures can result in plates with different properties. Experimental and numerical results demonstrate that bending along the longitudinal direction of the metal plate induces curvature along the transverse direction, providing a general route for designing advanced functional devices with intrinsically curved geometries.
The design of advanced functional devices often requires the use of intrinsically curved geometries that belong to the realm of non-Euclidean geometry and remain a challenge for traditional engineering approaches. Here, it is shown how the simple deflection of thick meta-plates based on hexagonal cellular mesostructures can be used to achieve a wide range of intrinsic (i.e., Gaussian) curvatures, including dome-like and saddle-like shapes. Depending on the unit cell structure, non-auxetic (i.e., positive Poisson ratio) or auxetic (i.e., negative Poisson ratio) plates can be obtained, leading to a negative or positive value of the Gaussian curvature upon bending, respectively. It is found that bending such meta-plates along their longitudinal direction induces a curvature along their transverse direction. Experimentally and numerically, it is shown how the amplitude of this induced curvature is related to the longitudinal bending and the geometry of the meta-plate. The approach proposed here constitutes a general route for the rational design of advanced functional devices with intrinsically curved geometries. To demonstrate the merits of this approach, a scaling relationship is presented, and its validity is demonstrated by applying it to 3D-printed microscale meta-plates. Several applications for adaptive optical devices with adjustable focal length and soft wearable robotics are presented.

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