Analysis and design of bistable and thermally reversible metamaterials inspired by shape-memory alloys
Aditya Vasudevan, Jos\'e A. Rodr\'iguez-Mart\'inez, Ignacio Romero

TL;DR
This paper presents the design and analysis of lattice metamaterials that mimic shape-memory alloys by exhibiting bistability and thermal reversibility, enabling controllable structural transformations through heat treatment.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel lattice design using nonlinear springs with thermal expansion mismatch to achieve reversible bistability, inspired by shape-memory alloy behavior.
Findings
Lattice structures can switch between stable states with temperature changes.
Residual stresses induce bistability at low temperatures.
Analytical and numerical methods validate the design principles.
Abstract
In this work, we study lattice structures that exhibit a bistable behavior, i. e., they can snap from one stable state to another, and are also completely reversible, capable of reverting back to its original state through a heat treatment. We design this behavior by constructing lattice structures using networks of nonlinear springs that display tension-compression asymmetry and have different thermal expansion coefficients. The mismatch in the thermal expansion coefficients induces residual stresses in the springs which results in the lattice structure exhibiting bistability at low temperatures and monostability at high temperatures. This behavior mimics the crystallographic phase transformations of shape memory alloys, but here artificially introduced in a structural lattice. By analyzing a representative unit cell, we quantify the effect that the stiffness and the thermal expansion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Materials and Mechanics · Cellular and Composite Structures · Structural Analysis and Optimization
