Bio‐Inspired Pressure‐Dependent Programmable Mechanical Metamaterial with Self‐Sealing Ability

Author:

Ghavidelnia Naeim1ORCID,Slesarenko Viacheslav1ORCID,Speck Olga12ORCID,Eberl Christoph13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cluster of Excellence livMatS @ FIT — Freiburg Center for Interactive Materials and Bioinspired Technologies University of Freiburg Georges‐Köhler‐Allee 105 D‐79110 Freiburg Germany

2. Plant Biomechanics Group @ Botanic Garden Freiburg University of Freiburg Schänzlestr. 1 D‐79104 Freiburg Germany

3. Materials Design Department Fraunhofer Institute for Mechanics of Materials (IWM) Wöhlerstr. 11 D‐79108 Freiburg Germany

Abstract

AbstractSelf‐sealing is one of the fascinating functions in nature that enables living material systems to respond immediately to damage. A prime plant model is Delosperma cooperi, which can rapidly self‐seal damaged succulent leaves by systematically deforming until the wound closes. Inspired by this self‐sealing principle, a novel programmable mechanical metamaterial has been developed to mimic the underlying damage management concept. This material is able to react autonomously to changes in its physical condition caused by an induced damage. To design this ability into the programmable metamaterial, a permeable unit cell design has been developed that can change size depending on the internal pressure. The parameter space and associated mechanical functionality of the unit cell design is simulated and analyzed under periodic boundary conditions and various pressures. The principles of self‐sealing behavior in designed metamaterials are investigated, crack closure efficiency is identified for different crack lengths, the limitations of the proposed approach are discussed, and successful crack closure is experimentally demonstrated in the fabricated metamaterial. Although this study facilitates the first step on the way of integrating new bio‐inspired principles in the metamaterials, the results show how programmable mechanical metamaterials might extend materials design space from pure properties to life‐like abilities.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

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