New perspectives on asymmetric bending behavior: A lesson learned from leaves
Anran Wei, Zhenbin Guo, Fenglin Guo

TL;DR
This paper investigates the asymmetric bending behavior of U-shaped beams inspired by plant leaves, revealing buckling mechanisms and providing a semi-analytical model validated by simulations and experiments, with implications for soft robotics design.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytical model for asymmetric bending in U-shaped beams, linking buckling to geometry and providing insights for soft actuator design.
Findings
Buckling of sidewalls causes asymmetric deformation.
A semi-analytical model for critical buckling moment.
Experimental and simulation validation of the model.
Abstract
Designing materials or structures that can achieve asymmetric shape-shifting in response to symmetrically switching stimuli is a promising approach to enhance the locomotion performance of soft actuators/robots. Inspired by the geometry of slender leaves of many plants, we find that the thin-walled beam with a U-shaped cross section exhibits asymmetric deformation behaviors under bending with opposite orientations. Although this novel mechanical property has been long noticed and utilized in some applications, its mechanism is still unclear so far. In this study, we attribute this asymmetric bending behavior of thin-walled U-shaped beams to the buckling of sidewalls caused by the bending-induced compressive effect. Based on the Euler-Bernoulli beam theory and Kirchhoff-Love thin plate theory, a simple but efficient model is established to derive the critical moment for the sidewall…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Materials and Mechanics · Cellular Mechanics and Interactions · Silk-based biomaterials and applications
