Abstract Soft deployable structures – unlike conventional piecewise rigid deployables based on hinges and springs – can assume intricate 3‐D shapes, thereby enabling transformative soft robotic and manufacturing technologies. Their virtually infinite degrees of freedom allow precise control over the final shape. The same enabling high dimensionality, however, poses a challenge for solving the inverse problem: fabrication of desired 3D structures requires manufacturing technologies with extensive local actuation and control, and a trial‐and‐error search over a large design space. Both of these shortcomings are addressed by first developing a simplified planar fabrication approach that combines two ingredients: strain mismatch between two layers of a composite shell and kirigami cuts that relieves localized stress. In principle, it is possible to generate targeted 3‐D shapes by designing the appropriate kirigami cuts and the amount of prestretch (without any local control). Second, a data‐driven physics‐guided framework is formulated that reduces the dimensionality of the inverse design problem using autoencoders and efficiently searches through the “latent” parameter space in an active learning approach. The rapid design procedure is demonstrated via a range of target shapes, such as peanuts, pringles, flowers, and pyramids. Experiments and our numerical predictions are found to be in good agreement.
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Soft Kirigami Composites for Form‐Finding of Fully Flexible Deployables
Abstract A new class of thin flexible structures is introduced that morph from flat into prescribed 3D shapes through strain mismatch between layers of a composite plate. To achieve control over the target shape, two different concepts are coupled. First, motivated by biological growth, strain mismatch is applied between the flat composite layers to transform it into a 3D shape. Depending on the amount of the applied strain mismatch, the transformation involves buckling into one of the available finite number of deformation modes. Second, inspired by kirigami, portions of the material are removed from one of the layers according to a specific pattern. This dramatically increases the number of possible 3D shapes and allows us to attain specific topologies. An experimental apparatus that allows precise control of the strain mismatch is devised. An inverse problem is posed, where starting from a given target shape, the physical parameters that make these shapes possible are determined. To show how the concept works, it focuses on circular composite plates and designs a kirigami pattern that yields a hemispherical structure. The analysis combines a theoretical approach with numerical simulations and physical experiments to understand and predict the shape transition from 2D to 3D. The tools developed here can be extended to attain arbitrary 3D shapes. The initially flat shape suggests that conventional additive manufacturing techniques can be used to functionalize the soft kirigami composite to fabricate, for example, deployable 3D structures, smart skins, and soft electromagnetic metasurfaces.
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- PAR ID:
- 10476029
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Advanced Materials Technologies
- Volume:
- 9
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2365-709X
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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