Stress focusing and damage protection in topological Maxwell metamaterials
Caleb Widstrand, Chen Hu, Xiaoming Mao, Joseph Labuz, Stefano Gonella

TL;DR
This paper experimentally demonstrates how topological Maxwell lattices can focus stress along domain walls, providing damage protection and robustness against defects, with potential applications in fracture-resistant structural design.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental validation of stress focusing and damage protection in realistic topological Maxwell lattices with finite-thickness hinges.
Findings
Stress focusing occurs robustly even with structural hinges.
Polarization protects the lattice from hinge defects and cracks.
SSS domain walls outperform trivial reinforcement methods.
Abstract
Advances in the field of topological mechanics have highlighted a number of special mechanical properties of Maxwell lattices, including the ability to focus zero-energy floppy modes and states of self-stress (SSS) at their edges and interfaces. Due to their topological character, these phenomena are protected against perturbations in the lattice geometry and material properties, which makes them robust against the emergence of structural non-idealities, defects, and damage. Recent computational work has shown that the ability of Maxwell lattices to focus stress along prescribed SSS domain walls can be harnessed for the purpose of protecting other regions in the bulk of the lattice from detrimental stress concentration and, potentially, inhibiting the onset of fracture mechanisms at stress hot spots such as holes and cracks. This property provides a powerful, geometry-based tool for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Nonlinear Photonic Systems · Adhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions
