4.6 Article

Photo-induced spatiotemporal bending of shape memory polymer beams

Journal

SMART MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES
Volume 31, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1361-665X/ac9d75

Keywords

stimuli-responsive material; shape memory polymer; spatiotemporal behavior; non-equilibrium processes; photothermal-mechanical actuation; bending dynamics

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation through a CAREER Award [CMMI-2048219]

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This study investigates the non-equilibrium kinetic processes and spatiotemporal bending of a photothermal shape memory polymer through analytical, numerical, and experimental methods. By establishing a thermomechanical model, different types of bending dynamics are observed and the effect of changes in the angles of incidence caused by laser penetration on bending is considered.
In response to external stimuli, such as heat, light, or magnetic fields, stimuli-responsive soft materials can change their current configuration to a new equilibrium state through non-equilibrium kinetic processes, including reaction, diffusion, and viscoelastic relaxation, which generates novel spatiotemporal shape-morphing behavior. Using a photothermal shape memory polymer (SMP) cantilever beam as a model system, this work analytically, numerically, and experimentally studies its non-equilibrium kinetic processes and spatiotemporal bending under light illumination. We establish a thermomechanical model for SMPs capturing the concurrent non-equilibrium processes of heat transfer and viscoelastic relaxation, which induces inhomogeneous temperature and strain distributions through the thickness of the beam, resulting in its bending and unbending. By varying the key dimensionless parameters, we theoretically and experimentally observe different types of bending dynamics. Moreover, our theory takes into consideration changes in the angles of incidence caused by extensive beam bending, and demonstrates that this effect can dramatically delay the bending due to reduction of the effective light intensity, which is further validated experimentally. This work demonstrates programmable and predictable spatiotemporal morphing of SMPs, and provides design guidelines for SMP morphing structures and robots.

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