Abstract
Single-mode deformations of two-dimensional materials, such as the Miura-ori zig-zag fold, are important to the design of deployable structures because of their robustness; these usually require careful pre-patterning of the material. Here we show that inward contraction of a curved boundary produces a fine wrinkle pattern with a novel structure that suggests similar single-mode characteristics, but with minimal pre-patterning. Using finite-element representation of the contraction of a thin circular annular sheet, we show that these sheets wrinkle into a structure well approximated by an isometric structure composed of conical sectors and flat, triangular facets. Isometry favours the restriction of such deformations to a robust low-bending energy channel that avoids stretching. This class of buckling offers a novel way to manipulate sheet morphology via boundary forces.
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CITATION STYLE
Pal, A. S., Pocivavsek, L., & Witten, T. A. (2024). Faceted wrinkling by contracting a curved boundary. Soft Matter, 20(16), 3473–3482. https://doi.org/10.1039/d3sm01347b
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