TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel approach to achieve large, controlled shape transformations in dielectric elastomers by exploiting the Treloar-Kearsley instability, enabling significant actuation with minimal voltage through theoretical and numerical analysis.
Contribution
It demonstrates how to harness the TK instability for soft, large deformations in dielectric elastomers using theory and finite element simulations.
Findings
Large shape changes achieved with small voltages.
Theoretical analysis of the TK instability in dielectric elastomers.
Finite element simulations confirm practical applicability.
Abstract
Dielectric elastomers have significant potential for new technologies ranging from soft robots to biomedical devices, driven by their ability to display complex shape changes in response to electrical stimulus. However, an important shortcoming of current realizations is that large voltages are required for useful actuation strains. This work proposes, and demonstrates through theory and numerical simulations, a strategy to achieve large and controlled actuation by exploiting the electromechanical analog of the Treloar-Kearsley (TK) instability. The key idea is to use the fact that the TK instability is a symmetry-breaking bifurcation, which implies the existence of a symmetry-driven constant-energy region in the energy landscape. This provides for nonlinear soft modes with large deformations that can be accessed with very small external stimulus, which is achieved here by applying a…
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