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      Locking Zipper-Coupled Origami Tubes for Deployable Energy Absorption

      , ,
      Journal of Mechanisms and Robotics
      ASME International

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          Abstract

          Energy absorption devices are widely used to mitigate damage from collisions and impact loads. Due to the inherent uncertainty of possible impact characteristics, passive energy absorbers with fixed mechanical properties are not capable of serving in versatile application scenarios. Here, we explore a deployable design concept where origami tubes can extend, lock, and are intended to absorb energy through crushing (buckling and plasticity). This system concept is unique because origami deployment can increase the crushing distance between two impacting bodies and can tune the energy absorption characteristics. We show that the stiffness, peak crushing force, and total energy absorption of the origami tubes all increase with the deployed state. We present numerical and experimental studies that investigate these tunable behaviors under both static and dynamic scenarios. The energy-absorbing performance of the deployed origami tubes is slightly better than conventional prismatic tubes in terms of total absorbed energy and peak force. When the origami tubes are only partially deployed, they exhibit a nearly elastic collapse behavior; however, when they are locked in a more deployed configuration, they can experience non-recoverable crushing with higher energy absorption. Parametric studies reveal that the geometric design of the tube can control the nonlinear relationship between energy absorption and deployment. A physical model shows the potential of the self-locking after deployment. This concept for deployable energy-absorbing origami tubes can enable future protective systems with on-demand properties for different impact scenarios.

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          Most cited references22

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          Multistable Architected Materials for Trapping Elastic Strain Energy.

          3D printing and numerical analysis are combined to design a new class of architected materials that contain bistable beam elements and exhibit controlled trapping of elastic energy. The proposed energy-absorbing structures are reusable. Moreover, the mechanism of energy absorption stems solely from the structural geometry of the printed beam elements, and is therefore both material- and loading-rate independent.
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            Mechanical Metamaterials and Their Engineering Applications

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              Geometry of Miura-folded metamaterials.

              This paper describes two folded metamaterials based on the Miura-ori fold pattern. The structural mechanics of these metamaterials are dominated by the kinematics of the folding, which only depends on the geometry and therefore is scale-independent. First, a folded shell structure is introduced, where the fold pattern provides a negative Poisson's ratio for in-plane deformations and a positive Poisson's ratio for out-of-plane bending. Second, a cellular metamaterial is described based on a stacking of individual folded layers, where the folding kinematics are compatible between layers. Additional freedom in the design of the metamaterial can be achieved by varying the fold pattern within each layer.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Mechanisms and Robotics
                ASME International
                1942-4302
                1942-4310
                August 01 2022
                August 01 2022
                May 02 2022
                : 14
                : 4
                Article
                10.1115/1.4054363
                29d2f4b2-fcd4-46a9-98f8-3ad0724b0c33
                © 2022

                https://www.asme.org/publications-submissions/publishing-information/legal-policies

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