Origami-inspired, on-demand deployable and collapsible mechanical metamaterials with tunable stiffness

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Abstract

Origami has been employed to build deployable mechanical metamaterials through folding and unfolding along the crease lines. Deployable metamaterials are usually flexible, particularly along their deploying and collapsing directions, which unfortunately in many cases leads to an unstable deployed state, i.e., small perturbations May collapse the structure along the same deployment path. Here we create an origami-inspired mechanical metamaterial with on-demand deployability and selective collapsibility through energy analysis. This metamaterial has autonomous deployability from the collapsed state and can be selectively collapsed along two different paths, embodying low stiffness for one path and substantially high stiffness for another path. The created mechanical metamaterial yields load-bearing capability in the deployed direction while possessing great deployability and collapsibility. The principle in this work can be utilized to design and create versatile origami-inspired mechanical metamaterials that can find many applications.

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APA

Zhai, Z., Wang, Y., & Jiang, H. (2018). Origami-inspired, on-demand deployable and collapsible mechanical metamaterials with tunable stiffness. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115(9), 2032–2037. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1720171115

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