论文标题
多稳定拓扑机械超材料
Multistable Topological Mechanical Metamaterials
论文作者
论文摘要
在过去的十年中,在创建具有拓扑保护特征的机械超材料(例如单向边缘状态和拓扑极化弹性)的机械超材料方面已广泛使用了物质量化状态的概念。麦克斯韦(Maxwell)晶格代表一类拓扑机械超材料,在拓扑极化时,边缘/界面在边缘/接口处表现出不同的鲁棒机械性能。在这些材料中实现拓扑相变,可以使这些边缘状态的开关进行开关,从而为机械响应和波浪传播提供了前所未有的机会。但是,由于机械和几何限制,这种过渡对于在麦克斯韦拓扑超材料中实验控制非常具有挑战性。在这里,我们创建了一个带有双态单元的麦克斯韦晶格,以在拓扑状态之间实现同步过渡,并在理论上和实验上都在拓扑阶段之间转换时,表现出巨大的刚度。通过将多稳定性与拓扑相变相结合,这是第一次的超材料不仅具有拓扑保护的机械性能,这些特性迅速而可逆地改变,而且还提供了丰富的设计空间,用于创新机械计算体系结构和可重编程的神经型神经形态的超材料。此外,我们使用多物质3D打印设计和制造拓扑麦克斯韦晶格,并通过添加剂制造展示了微型化的潜力。这些设计原理适用于可转换的拓扑超材料,用于各种任务,例如可切换能量吸收,降低冲击,波浪裁缝,神经形态的超材料和受控的变形系统。
Concepts from quantum topological states of matter have been extensively utilized in the past decade in creating mechanical metamaterials with topologically protected features, such as one-way edge states and topologically polarized elasticity. Maxwell lattices represent a class of topological mechanical metamaterials that exhibit distinct robust mechanical properties at edges/interfaces when they are topologically polarized. Realizing topological phase transitions in these materials would enable on-and-off switching of these edge states, opening unprecedented opportunities to program mechanical response and wave propagation. However, such transitions are extremely challenging to experimentally control in Maxwell topological metamaterials due to mechanical and geometric constraints. Here we create a Maxwell lattice with bistable units to implement synchronized transitions between topological states and demonstrate dramatically different stiffnesses as the lattice transforms between topological phases both theoretically and experimentally. By combining multistability with topological phase transitions, for the first time, this metamaterial not only exhibits topologically protected mechanical properties that swiftly and reversibly change, but also offers a rich design space for innovating mechanical computing architectures and reprogrammable neuromorphic metamaterials. Moreover, we design and fabricate a topological Maxwell lattice using multi-material 3D printing and demonstrate the potential for miniaturization via additive manufacturing. These design principles are applicable to transformable topological metamaterials for a variety of tasks such as switchable energy absorption, impact mitigation, wave tailoring, neuromorphic metamaterials, and controlled morphing systems.