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Published March 15, 2021 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Systematic two-scale image analysis of extreme deformations in soft architectured sheets

Abstract

The multi-scale nature of architectured materials raises the need for advanced experimental methods suitable for the identification of their effective properties, especially when their size is finite and they undergo extreme deformations. The present work demonstrates that state-of-the art image processing methods combined with numerical and analytical models provide a comprehensive quantitative description of these solids and their global behaviour, including the influence of the boundary conditions, of the manufacturing process, and of geometric and constitutive non-linearities. To this end, an adapted multi-scale digital image correlation analysis is used to track both elongations and rotations of particular features of the unit cell at the local and global (homogenized) scale of the material. This permits to observe with unprecedented clarity the strain fields for various unit cells in the structure and to detect global deformation patterns and heterogeneities of the homogenized strain distribution. This method is here demonstrated on elastic sheets undergoing extreme longitudinal and shear deformations. These experimental results are compared to non-linear finite element simulations, which are also used to evaluate the effects of manufacturing imperfections on the response. A skeletal representation of the architectured solid is then extracted from the experiments and used to create a purely-kinematic truss-hinge model that can accurately capture its behaviour. The analysis proposed in this work can be extended to guide the design of two-dimensional architectured solids featuring other regular, quasi-regular or graded patterns, and subjected to other types of loads.

Additional Information

© 2020 Elsevier Ltd. Received 3 August 2020, Revised 20 October 2020, Accepted 15 November 2020, Available online 20 November 2020. This work was partly financed by the french-swiss ANR-SNF project MechNanoTruss (ANR-15-CE29-0024-01). F.A. acknowledges the support of the French doctoral fellowship "Contrat Doctoral Spécifique pour Normalien". C.D. acknowledges support from the US Army Research Office Grant W911NF-17-1-0147. CRediT authorship contribution statement: Filippo Agnelli: Conceptualization, Investigation, Formal analysis, Writing - original draft. Pierre Margerit: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Writing - original draft. Paolo Celli: Writing - review & editing. Chiara Daraio: Resources, Writing - review & editing. Andrei Constantinescu: Conceptualization, Resources, Supervision, Writing - review & editing. Declaration of Competing Interest: None.

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Supplemental Material - 1-s2.0-S0020740320343101-mmc1.mp4

Supplemental Material - 1-s2.0-S0020740320343101-mmc2.mp4

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Created:
August 20, 2023
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October 20, 2023