Geometrically controlled snapping transitions in shells with curved creases
Nakul P. Bende, Arthur A. Evans, Sarah Innes-Gold, Luis A. Marin, Itai, Cohen, Ryan C. Hayward, Christian D. Santangelo

TL;DR
This paper explores how the interplay of curvature and creases in shells enables controlled snapping transitions, providing a geometric design rule for creating programmable, multi-stable structures with rapid actuation.
Contribution
It introduces a geometric framework for understanding and designing snapping transitions in curved shells, advancing beyond material-based explanations.
Findings
Conditions for continuous folding of creased shells are identified.
Snapping transitions occur when geometric constraints are violated.
Design principles are applicable across scales and materials.
Abstract
Curvature and mechanics are intimately connected for thin materials, and this coupling between geometry and physical properties is readily seen in folded structures from intestinal villi and pollen grains, to wrinkled membranes and programmable metamaterials. While the well-known rules and mechanisms behind folding a flat surface have been used to create deployable structures and shape transformable materials, folding of curved shells is still not fundamentally understood. Curved shells naturally deform by simultaneously bending and stretching, and while this coupling gives them great stability for engineering applications, it makes folding a surface of arbitrary curvature a non-trivial task. Here we discuss the geometry of folding a creased shell, and demonstrate theoretically the conditions under which it may fold continuously. When these conditions are violated we show, using…
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