9 July 2018
San Francesco - Via della Quarquonia 1 (Classroom 2 )
Kirigami (from the Japanese kiru = to cut, kami = paper) is the ancient Japanese art of paper sculptures, and it consists of cutting and stretching a single sheet of paper.
The stretch causes the cracks to open and display the decorative pattern. From the mechanical point of view, because of the cracks, a kirigami metamaterial will have lower strength than a pristine sheet.
Nonetheless, the cracks will render the sheet more stretchable, hence tougher.
The question is then: is there then a crack pattern that can achieve both high strength and high toughness?
In this talk, I will show simulation tools that can help answer this question, based on my previous works on meshfree methods.
In particular, I will present an arc-length solver able to handle very sudden snap-backs occurring in cracks propagating in soft materials under large strains.
I will also show some attempts to manufacture kirigami structures with the corresponding experimental uniaxial stress-strain curves.
relatore:
Barbieri, Ettore
Units:
MUSAM