Tailoring Stress-Strain Curves of Flexible Snapping Mechanical Metamaterial for On-Demand Mechanical Responses via Data-Driven Inverse Design.
Zhiping ChaiZisheng ZongHaochen YongXingxing KeJiaqi ZhuHan DingChuan Fei GuoZhigang WuPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2024)
By incorporating soft materials into the architecture, flexible mechanical metamaterials enable promising applications, e.g., energy modulation, and shape morphing, with a well-controllable mechanical response, but suffer from spatial and temporal programmability towards higher-level mechanical intelligence. One feasible solution is to introduce snapping structures and then tune their responses by accurately tailoring the stress-strain curves. However, owing to the strongly coupled nonlinearity of structural deformation and material constitutive model, it is difficult to deduce their stress-strain curves using conventional ways. Here, a machine learning pipeline is trained with the finite element analysis data that considers those strongly coupled nonlinearities to accurately tailor the stress-strain curves of snapping metamaterialfor on-demand mechanical response with an accuracy of 97.41%, conforming well to experiment. Utilizing the established approach, the energy absorption efficiency of the snapping-metamaterial-based device can be tuned within the accessible range to realize different rebound heights of a falling ball, and soft actuators can be spatially and temporally programmed to achieve synchronous and sequential actuation with a single energy input. Purely relying on structure designs, the accurately tailored metamaterials increase the devices' tunability/programmability. Such an approach can potentially extend to similar nonlinear scenarios towards predictable or intelligent mechanical responses.