Wrinkles, rucks, and folds formed in a heavy sheet on a frictional surface
Keisuke Yoshida, Hirofumi Wada

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation and transition of wrinkles, rucks, and folds in heavy elastic sheets on rigid surfaces, revealing universal thresholds and the influence of friction through experiments, simulations, and theory.
Contribution
It introduces a minimal experimental setup and a unified physical model to understand the morphology sequence of elastic sheets influenced by gravity and friction.
Findings
Universal wrinkling threshold with fixed wrinkle number.
Linear scaling of onset displacement with sheet thickness.
Friction introduces an additional parameter affecting morphology.
Abstract
Soft elastic sheets resting on rigid surfaces develop wrinkles, rucks, and folds due to the combined influence of elasticity, gravity, and contact interactions. Despite their ubiquity, the principles governing their morphology and transitions remain unclear. We introduce a minimal experiment in which the center of a gravity-loaded sheet is gradually lifted from the supporting plane. This operation generates a clear sequence of shapes: an axisymmetric uplift, a finite number of wrinkles, system-spanning rucks produced by global buckling, and folded states that can arise from ruck collapse upon unloading at larger lifts. Combining experiments, finite-element simulations, and F\"oppl-von K\'arm\'an theory, we establish a unified physical picture of this morphology sequence. In the frictionless case, elasticity and gravity alone govern the response, leading to a universal wrinkling…
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