Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6748228 International Journal of Solids and Structures 2018 39 Pages PDF
Abstract
Origami, the art of paper folding, is a technologically transformative art with applications at many length scales from material microstructure design to space deployable structures. The transformation of a two-dimensional fold pattern to a three-dimensional structure makes origami a practical basis for deployability, light-weight materials, and self-actuation. In order to predict the complex motions of origami structures including path traversal of instabilities, accurate and efficient modeling techniques are required. While many approaches consider rigid facets and/or linear approximations to rotations, a truss and hinge finite element method is presented here within a global coordinate system framework to accurately capture the geometric nonlinearities while allowing for small to moderate facet deformation. Accurately capturing these modes of deformation is critical toward understanding the elastic energetic states required for design and analysis of multistable origami structures and mechanical metamaterials. Particular formulation developments that we address to solve origami mechanics problems include formulation of a continuous and differentiable fold angle, strategy for selecting fold path off the flat state, and integration of common numerical approaches important for origami (large rotation formulation, enforcement of periodic boundary conditions for tessellations, arc-length continuation method for solving highly nonlinear loading paths, and a perturbation strategy for handling bifurcations). After formulating this truss finite element method, we verify our modified finite element method on well-studied structures. The waterbomb fold pattern is studied, and the interplay of the stretching and folding energies are considered toward design of a bistable structure that exhibits a fold based snap-through instability. This study is followed by analysis of a cylindrical network of waterbombs (axial periodicity) that exhibits a stretch driven instability. Lastly, a tessellated square twist pattern, exhibiting multiple bifurcations off the flat state is presented that employs all aspects of our numerical method.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Civil and Structural Engineering
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