Minimizing finite viscosity enhances relative kinetic energy absorption in bistable mechanical metamaterials but only with sufficiently fine discretization: a nonlinear dynamical size effect
Haning Xiu, Ryan Fancher, Ian Frankel, Patrick Ziemke, Muge, Fermen-Coker, Matthew Begley, and Nicholas Boechler

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that reducing finite viscosity in bistable mechanical metamaterials can significantly improve their ability to absorb impact energy, but only when the system is discretized finely enough to approach the continuum limit.
Contribution
It reveals a nonlinear dynamical size effect in bistable metamaterials, showing optimal impact mitigation occurs at sufficiently fine discretization and finite viscosity levels.
Findings
Lower viscosity enhances energy absorption near the continuum limit.
Discretization threshold depends sharply on viscosity.
Bistable systems can perform worse than linear ones at coarse discretization.
Abstract
Bistable mechanical metamaterials have shown promise for mitigating the harmful consequences of impact by converting kinetic energy into stored strain energy, offering an alternative and potentially synergistic approach to conventional methods of attenuating energy transmission. In this work, we numerically study the dynamic response of a one-dimensional bistable metamaterial struck by a high speed impactor (where the impactor velocity is commensurate with the sound speed), using the peak kinetic energy experienced at midpoint of the metamaterial compared to that in an otherwise identical linear system as our performance metric. We make five key findings: 1) The bistable material can counter-intuitively perform better (to nearly 1000x better than the linear system) as the viscosity decreases (but remains finite), but only when sufficiently fine discretization has been reached (i.e. the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Materials and Mechanics · Vibration Control and Rheological Fluids · Brake Systems and Friction Analysis
