Curved Geometries from Planar Director Fields: Solving the Two-Dimensional Inverse Problem
POSTER
Abstract
Thin nematic elastomers, composite hydrogels, and plant tissues are among many systems that display uniform anisotropic deformation upon external actuation. In these materials, the spatial orientation variation of a local director field induces intricate global shape changes. Despite extensive efforts, until recently there was no general solution to the inverse design problem: How to design a director field that deforms exactly into a desired surface geometry upon actuation, or whether such a field exists. In this work, we phrase this inverse problem as a hyperbolic system of differential equations. We prove that the inverse problem is locally integrable, provide an algorithm for its integration, and derive bounds on global solutions. We classify the set of director fields that deform into a given surface, thus paving the way to finding optimized fields.
*E. E. thanks the Alon fellowship and the Ernst and Kaethe Ascher Foundation. I.G. is grateful to the Azrieli Foundation for the award of an Azrieli Fellowship. This work was supported by ISF Grant No .1479/16 and Minerva Grant No .712273. H. A. was supported by NSF Grant No .DMR-1262047.
Presenters
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Itay Griniasty
- Laboratory of Atomic and Solid State Physics, Cornell University
- Cornell University