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Divergent Design of Mechanical Metamaterials Clan Deducted from Arc-serpentine Curve

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Abstract The exotic properties of mechanical metamaterials are determined by their unit-cells' structure and spatial arrangement, in analogy with the atoms of conventional materials. Companioned with the mechanism of structural or cellular materials1–5, the ancient wisdom of origami6–11 and kirigami12–16 and the involvement of multiphysics interaction2,17,18 enrich the programable mechanical behaviors of metamaterials, including shape-morphing8,12,14,16,19, compliance4,5,8,17,20, texture2,18,21, and topology11,18,22−25. However, typical design strategies are mainly convergent, which transfers various structures into one family of metamaterials that are relatively incompatible with the others and do not fully bring combinatorial principles3,10,26 into play. Here, we report a divergent strategy that designs a clan of mechanical metamaterials with diverse properties derived from a symmetric curve consisting of serpentines and arcs. We derived this composite curve into planar and cubic unit-cells and modularized them by attaching magnetics. Moreover, stacking each of them yields two- and three-dimensional auxetic metamaterials, respectively. Assembling with both modules, we achieved three thick plate-like metamaterials separately with flexibility, in-plane buckling, and foldability. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the hybrid of paradox properties is possible by combining two of the above assembles. We anticipate that this divergent strategy paves the path of building a hierarchical library of diverse combinable mechanical metamaterials and making conventional convergent strategies more efficient to various requests. Main
Title: Divergent Design of Mechanical Metamaterials Clan Deducted from Arc-serpentine Curve
Description:
Abstract The exotic properties of mechanical metamaterials are determined by their unit-cells' structure and spatial arrangement, in analogy with the atoms of conventional materials.
Companioned with the mechanism of structural or cellular materials1–5, the ancient wisdom of origami6–11 and kirigami12–16 and the involvement of multiphysics interaction2,17,18 enrich the programable mechanical behaviors of metamaterials, including shape-morphing8,12,14,16,19, compliance4,5,8,17,20, texture2,18,21, and topology11,18,22−25.
However, typical design strategies are mainly convergent, which transfers various structures into one family of metamaterials that are relatively incompatible with the others and do not fully bring combinatorial principles3,10,26 into play.
Here, we report a divergent strategy that designs a clan of mechanical metamaterials with diverse properties derived from a symmetric curve consisting of serpentines and arcs.
We derived this composite curve into planar and cubic unit-cells and modularized them by attaching magnetics.
Moreover, stacking each of them yields two- and three-dimensional auxetic metamaterials, respectively.
Assembling with both modules, we achieved three thick plate-like metamaterials separately with flexibility, in-plane buckling, and foldability.
Furthermore, we demonstrated that the hybrid of paradox properties is possible by combining two of the above assembles.
We anticipate that this divergent strategy paves the path of building a hierarchical library of diverse combinable mechanical metamaterials and making conventional convergent strategies more efficient to various requests.
Main.

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