Programmable Mechanical Metamaterials: the Role of Geometry
Bastiaan Florijn, Corentin Coulais, and Martin van Hecke

TL;DR
This study explores how the geometry of biholar metamaterials influences their mechanical response, demonstrating that parameters like porosity and hole size ratio can be tuned to achieve programmable, non-monotonic, and hysteretic behaviors.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how geometrical parameters affect the mechanical response, offering design guidelines for programmable metamaterials with tailored properties.
Findings
Geometry significantly tunes the strain ranges of non-monotonic response.
Large $t$ and $ ext{chi}$ lead to new physical behaviors.
Optimal programmability occurs at moderate $t$ and $ ext{chi}$ values.
Abstract
We experimentally and numerically study the precise role of geometry for the mechanics of biholar metamaterials, quasi-2D slabs of rubber patterned by circular holes of two alternating sizes. We recently showed how the response to uniaxial compression of these metamaterials can be programmed by their lateral confinement . In particular, there is a range of confining strains for which the resistance to compression becomes non-trivial - non-monotonic or hysteretic - in a range of compressive strains . Here we show how the dimensionless geometrical parameters and , which characterize the porosity and size ratio of the holes that pattern these metamaterials, can significantly tune these ranges over a wide range. We study the behavior for the limiting cases where and become large, and discuss the new physics that arises there. Away from…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsChemical and Physical Properties of Materials · Ion-surface interactions and analysis · Scientific Research and Discoveries
