4.7 Article

Strain compatibility and gradient elasticity in morphing origami metamaterials

Journal

EXTREME MECHANICS LETTERS
Volume 53, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eml.2022.101722

Keywords

Origami; Compliant shells; Poisson coefficient; Gradient elasticity; Geometric nonlinearity

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation, USA under CAREER award [CMMI-2045881]
  2. French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-17-CE08-0039]
  3. NASA Missouri Space Grant Consortium, USA

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The principles of origami design have practical applications in various technologies. This study provides a unified theory to understand and control the morphing paths of origami metamaterials through determining the compatible strains and corresponding elasticity functionals. The research reveals that different origami tessellations exhibit universal geometric and elastic properties.
The principles of origami design have proven useful in a number of technological applications. Origami tessellations in particular constitute a class of morphing metamaterials with unusual geometric and elastic properties. Although inextensible in principle, fine creases allow origami metamaterials to effectively deform non-isometrically. Determining the strains that are compatible with coarse-grained origami kinematics as well as the corresponding elasticity functionals is paramount to understanding and controlling the morphing paths of origami metamaterials. Here, within a unified theory, we solve this problem for a wide array of well-known origami tessellations including the Miura-ori as well as its more formidable oblique, non-developable and non-flat-foldable variants. We find that these patterns exhibit two universal properties. On one hand, they all admit equal but opposite in-plane and out-of-plane Poisson's ratios. On the other hand, their bending energy detaches from their in-plane strain and depends instead on the strain gradient. The results are illustrated over a case study of the self-equilibrium geometry of origami pillars.(c) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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