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research article

A reprogrammable mechanical metamaterial with stable memory

Chen, Tian  
•
Pauly, Mark  
•
Reis, Pedro M.  
January 21, 2021
Nature

Metamaterials are designed to realize exotic physical properties through the geometric arrangement of their underlying structural layout(1,2). Traditional mechanical metamaterials achieve functionalities such as a target Poisson's ratio(3) or shape transformation(4-6) through unit-cell optimization(7-9), often with spatial heterogeneity(10-12). These functionalities are programmed into the layout of the metamaterial in a way that cannot be altered. Although recent efforts have produced means of tuning such properties post-fabrication(13-19), they have not demonstrated mechanical reprogrammability analogous to that of digital devices, such as hard disk drives, in which each unit can be written to or read from in real time as required. Here we overcome this challenge by using a design framework for a tileable mechanical metamaterial with stable memory at the unit-cell level. Our design comprises an array of physical binary elements (m-bits), analogous to digital bits, with clearly delineated writing and reading phases. Each m-bit can be independently and reversibly switched between two stable states (acting as memory) using magnetic actuation to move between the equilibria of a bistable shell(20-25). Under deformation, each state is associated with a distinctly different mechanical response that is fully elastic and can be reversibly cycled until the system is reprogrammed. Encoding a set of binary instructions onto the tiled array yields markedly different mechanical properties; specifically, the stiffness and strength can be made to range over an order of magnitude. We expect that the stable memory and on-demand reprogrammability of mechanical properties in this design paradigm will facilitate the development of advanced forms of mechanical metamaterials.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41586-020-03123-5
Web of Science ID

WOS:000609212900012

Author(s)
Chen, Tian  
Pauly, Mark  
Reis, Pedro M.  
Date Issued

2021-01-21

Published in
Nature
Volume

589

Issue

7842

Start page

386

End page

390

Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sciences

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

design

•

matter

URL

Publisher's version of the paper

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-03123-5
Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

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Available on Infoscience
March 26, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/176206
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