Unexpected bending behavior of 2D lattice materials
Yu Yao, Yong Ni, and Ling-hui He

TL;DR
This paper reveals that 2D lattice materials can exhibit unexpected bending behaviors, with curvature types influenced by beam aspect ratio rather than Poisson's ratio alone, supported by theory and experiments.
Contribution
It uncovers a transition in bending curvature types in 2D lattice materials controlled by beam aspect ratio, challenging conventional understanding.
Findings
Transition between anticlastic and synclastic curvatures controlled by aspect ratio
The behavior is explained by competition between torsion and bending
A Cosserat continuum model accurately captures the phenomenon
Abstract
Architected 2D lattice materials are appealing for shape-shifting applications due to the tunable sign of Poisson's ratio. It is commonly believed that the positive and negative Poisson's ratios lead to anticlastic and synclastic curvatures respectively when the material is bent in one direction. Here, taking 2D beam lattices with star-shaped unit cells as examples, we show theoretically and demonstrate experimentally that this is not always true. At a fixed Poisson's ratio, we find a transition between anticlastic and synclastic bending curvatures controlled by the beam's cross-sectional aspect ratio. Such an unexpected behavior roots in the competition between torsion and bending of the beams, and can be well captured by a Cosserat continuum model.
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Materials and Mechanics · Cellular and Composite Structures · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
