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Creators/Authors contains: "Ebrahimi, Hossein"

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  1. Abstract Fish scales inspired materials platform can provide advanced mechanical properties and functionalities. These materials, inspired from fish scales take the form of either composite materials or multi-material discrete exoskeleton type structures. Over the last decade, they have been under intense scrutiny for generating tailorable and tunable stiffness, penetration and fracture resistance, buckling prevention, nonlinear damping, hydrodynamic and camouflaging functions. Such programmable behavior emerges from leveraging their unique morphology and structure-property relationships. Several advanced tools of characterization, manufacturing, modeling and computation have been employed to understand and discover their behavior. With the rapid proliferation of additive manufacturing (AM) techniques, and advancing envelope of modeling and computational methods, this field is seeing renewed efforts to realize even more ambitious designs. We present a review and recapitulation of the state-of-the art in fish scale inspired materials in this paper. 
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  2. Lakhtakia, Akhlesh; Martín-Palma, Raúl J.; Knez, Mato (Ed.)
  3. null (Ed.)
  4. null (Ed.)
    Abstract Stiff scales adorn the exterior surfaces of fishes, snakes, and many reptiles. They provide protection from external piercing attacks and control over global deformation behavior to aid locomotion, slithering, and swimming across a wide range of environmental condition. In this report, we investigate the dynamic behavior of biomimetic scale substrates for further understanding the origins of the nonlinearity that involve various aspect of scales interaction, sliding kinematics, interfacial friction, and their combination. Particularly, we study the vibrational characteristics through an analytical model and numerical investigations for the case of a simply supported scale covered beam. Our results reveal for the first time that biomimetic scale beams exhibit viscous damping behavior even when only Coulomb friction is postulated for free vibrations. We anticipate and quantify the anisotropy in the damping behavior with respect to curvature. We also find that unlike static pure bending where friction increases bending stiffness, a corresponding increase in natural frequency for the dynamic case does not arise for simply supported beam. Since both scale geometry, distribution and interfacial properties can be easily tailored, our study indicates a biomimetic strategy to design exceptional synthetic materials with tailorable damping behavior. 
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