Bifurcation instructed design of multistate machines.
Teaya YangDavid HathcockYuchao ChenPaul L McEuenJames P SethnaItai CohenItay GriniastyPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
We propose a design paradigm for multistate machines where transitions from one state to another are organized by bifurcations of multiple equilibria of the energy landscape describing the collective interactions of the machine components. This design paradigm is attractive since, near bifurcations, small variations in a few control parameters can result in large changes to the system's state providing an emergent lever mechanism. Further, the topological configuration of transitions between states near such bifurcations ensures robust operation, making the machine less sensitive to fabrication errors and noise. To design such machines, we develop and implement a new efficient algorithm that searches for interactions between the machine components that give rise to energy landscapes with these bifurcation structures. We demonstrate a proof of concept for this approach by designing magnetoelastic machines whose motions are primarily guided by their magnetic energy landscapes and show that by operating near bifurcations we can achieve multiple transition pathways between states. This proof of concept demonstration illustrates the power of this approach, which could be especially useful for soft robotics and at the microscale where typical macroscale designs are difficult to implement.