Anomalous snapping behavior in asymmetrically constrained elastic strips
Tomohiko G. Sano, Hirofumi Wada

TL;DR
This paper investigates how asymmetric boundary constraints in elastic strips lead to complex snap-buckling behaviors, revealing rich hysteresis and shape transitions through combined experiments, theory, and exact solutions.
Contribution
It introduces the first comprehensive analytical framework for asymmetric snap-buckling in elastic strips, highlighting the effects of boundary asymmetry on mechanical behavior.
Findings
Asymmetric boundary conditions cause hysteretic force responses.
Exact analytical solutions explain shape transitions.
Reproducible and switch-like buckling behaviors observed.
Abstract
When a flat elastic strip is compressed along its axis, it is bent in one of two possible directions via spontaneous symmetry breaking and forms a cylindrical arc, a phenomenon well known as Euler buckling. When this cylindrical section is pushed in the other direction, the bending direction can suddenly reverse. This instability is called snap-through buckling and is one of the elementary shape transitions in a prestressed thin structure. Combining experiments and theory, we study snap-buckling of an elastic strip with one end hinged and the other end clamped. These asymmetric boundary constraints break the intrinsic symmetry of the strip, generating rich exotic mechanical behaviors including largely hysteretic but reproducible force responses and switch-like discontinuous shape changes. We establish the set of exact analytical solutions that fully explain all of our major experimental…
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