Reconfigurable Kirigami
ORAL
Abstract
Kirigami is an art form wherein cuts introduced in flat, thin sheets allows the sheet to morph from one single closed and compact configuration into a given open structure, via a coordinated rotation of the individual elements. We depart from this simple paradigm by proposing a framework for the design of compact reconfigurable kirigami patterns, which can morph from a closed and compact configuration into a deployed state conforming to any prescribed target shape, and subsequently be contracted into a different closed and compact configuration. We further establish a condition for producing reconfigurable kirigami patterns which are rigid deployable. Together this lays out a new path for designing shape-morphing mechanical metamaterials.
*This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under grant no. DMS-2002103 (to Gary Choi), DMR 14-20570 (to L. Mahadevan), DMREF grant no. 15-33985 (to L. Mahadevan) and EFRI grant no. 18-30901 (to L. Mahadevan).
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Presenters
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Gary Choi
- Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Mathematics, MIT
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT