TY - JOUR
T1 - Buckling and twisting of advanced materials into morphable 3D mesostructures
AU - Zhao, Hangbo
AU - Li, Kan
AU - Han, Mengdi
AU - Zhu, Feng
AU - Vázquez-Guardado, Abraham
AU - Guo, Peijun
AU - Xie, Zhaoqian
AU - Park, Yoonseok
AU - Chen, Lin
AU - Wang, Xueju
AU - Luan, Haiwen
AU - Yang, Yiyuan
AU - Wang, Heling
AU - Liang, Cunman
AU - Xue, Yeguang
AU - Schaller, Richard D.
AU - Chanda, Debashis
AU - Huang, Yonggang
AU - Zhang, Yihui
AU - Rogers, John A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Recently developed methods in mechanically guided assembly provide deterministic access to wide-ranging classes of complex, 3D structures in high-performance functional materials, with characteristic length scales that can range from nanometers to centimeters. These processes exploit stress relaxation in prestretched elastomeric platforms to affect transformation of 2D precursors into 3D shapes by in- and out-of-plane translational displacements. This paper introduces a scheme for introducing local twisting deformations into this process, thereby providing access to 3D mesostructures that have strong, local levels of chirality and other previously inaccessible geometrical features. Here, elastomeric assembly platforms segmented into interconnected, rotatable units generate in-plane torques imposed through bonding sites at engineered locations across the 2D precursors during the process of stress relaxation. Nearly 2 dozen examples illustrate the ideas through a diverse variety of 3D structures, including those with designs inspired by the ancient arts of origami/kirigami and with layouts that can morph into different shapes. A mechanically tunable, multilayered chiral 3D metamaterial configured for operation in the terahertz regime serves as an application example guided by finite-element analysis and electromagnetic modeling.
AB - Recently developed methods in mechanically guided assembly provide deterministic access to wide-ranging classes of complex, 3D structures in high-performance functional materials, with characteristic length scales that can range from nanometers to centimeters. These processes exploit stress relaxation in prestretched elastomeric platforms to affect transformation of 2D precursors into 3D shapes by in- and out-of-plane translational displacements. This paper introduces a scheme for introducing local twisting deformations into this process, thereby providing access to 3D mesostructures that have strong, local levels of chirality and other previously inaccessible geometrical features. Here, elastomeric assembly platforms segmented into interconnected, rotatable units generate in-plane torques imposed through bonding sites at engineered locations across the 2D precursors during the process of stress relaxation. Nearly 2 dozen examples illustrate the ideas through a diverse variety of 3D structures, including those with designs inspired by the ancient arts of origami/kirigami and with layouts that can morph into different shapes. A mechanically tunable, multilayered chiral 3D metamaterial configured for operation in the terahertz regime serves as an application example guided by finite-element analysis and electromagnetic modeling.
KW - Kirigami
KW - Metamaterials
KW - Origami
KW - Three-dimensional fabrication
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85068256683&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1901193116
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1901193116
M3 - Article
C2 - 31217291
AN - SCOPUS:85068256683
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 116
SP - 13239
EP - 13248
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 27
ER -