Passive Vibration Isolation Characteristics of Negative Extensibility Metamaterials
Somya Ranjan Patro, Hemant Sharma, Seokgyu Yang, Jinkyu Yang

TL;DR
This paper investigates the vibration isolation capabilities of negative extensibility metamaterials with a novel stiffness switching mechanism inspired by the Braess paradox, demonstrating superior performance in high-amplitude vibration suppression.
Contribution
It introduces a dynamic model with coupled nonlinear springs that switch stiffness to achieve passive vibration isolation, advancing understanding of multistable metamaterials' behavior.
Findings
Effective low-frequency vibration isolation demonstrated
Superior performance compared to existing bistable systems
Stiffness switching mechanism enhances adaptive vibration control
Abstract
Negative extensibility refers to the category of mechanical metamaterials having an unusual phenomenon where the system contracts upon expansion. The dynamic analysis of such systems is crucial for exploring the vibration isolation characteristics, forming the prime focus of the present study. Inspired by the Braess paradox, the mechanical model incorporates coupled tunable nonlinear spring stiffness properties (strain hardening and softening), which alternate when a certain displacement threshold is exceeded. This stiffness switching mechanism facilitates low frequency passive vibration isolation using the phenomenon of countersnapping instability. The vibration isolation characteristics resulting from the stiffness switching mechanism are investigated using time and frequency domain plots. Furthermore, the relationship between the stiffness switching mechanism and various system…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVibration Control and Rheological Fluids · Acoustic Wave Phenomena Research · Cellular and Composite Structures
