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3D polycatenated architected materials.

Wenjie Zhou1, Sujeeka Nadarajah1, Liuchi Li2,3

  • 1Division of Engineering and Applied Science, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

We introduce polycatenated architected materials (PAMs), discrete interlocked rings forming 3D networks. These novel materials exhibit tunable fluid-like and solid-like behaviors, responding to stimuli.

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Area of Science:

  • Materials Science
  • Mechanical Engineering
  • Nanotechnology

Background:

  • Architected materials rely on continuous networks for mechanical properties.
  • Designing materials with tunable responses is a key challenge.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Introduce polycatenated architected materials (PAMs) with discrete interlocked rings.
  • Develop a design framework for translating crystalline networks into PAMs.
  • Explore the mechanical and stimuli-responsive properties of PAMs.

Main Methods:

  • Propose a general design framework for PAMs.
  • Analyze PAMs' behavior under shear loads (non-Newtonian fluid-like).
  • Investigate PAMs' response to larger strains (lattice/foam-like).
  • Demonstrate microscale shape changes in response to electrostatic charges.

Main Results:

  • PAMs exhibit non-Newtonian fluid behavior (shear-thinning/thickening) controllable by topology.
  • At larger strains, PAMs show nonlinear stress-strain relations.
  • PAMs demonstrate stimuli-responsive shape morphing via electrostatic charges.

Conclusions:

  • PAMs offer a new class of architected materials with unique properties.
  • Their tunable mechanical responses and stimuli-responsiveness are significant.
  • PAMs hold potential for advanced applications like energy absorption and morphing architectures.