Abstract
Origami-inspired mechanical metamaterials have recently drawn increasing attention since their flexible mechanical performance has been greatly enhanced by introducing origami patterns to the thin-shell structures. As a typical origami pattern, the waterbomb tube could be adopted to the design of mechanical metamaterials. However, existing designs predominantly make use of the radial expansion/contraction motion of the structure, thereby limiting its full potential to be explored. Here we report a twist motion of tubular mechanical metamaterials based on waterbomb origami that is previously undiscovered. We demonstrate through a detailed kinematic analysis that the initial twist is a rigid-origami motion if the corresponding row of the tube under twist is fully squeezed with both line and plane symmetry, whereas all the subsequent twist motion requires material deformation. The twist angle per axial strain and its relationship with the geometrical parameters of the tube are revealed. Experimental results show the enhancement in stiffness of the tube with the occurrence of the continuous twist motion. We envisage that this finding could greatly expand the application of the waterbomb tube in the design of origami metamaterials with programmable and tuneable mechanical properties.
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Introduction
Origami, an ancient oriental art of producing 2D or 3D intricate structures through folding a flat sheet of paper, has recently seen surge in a variety of engineering fields. The highlights in the newly formed origami engineering include metamaterials1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9, self-folding machine and robots10,11,12, reconfigurable structure13, shock-resistance device14, packaging15,16, and so on. Particularly, the origami-inspired metamaterials refer to the man-made materials that gain their unusual properties from structure rather than composition. Here attention is drawn to the mechanical metamaterials17, most of which are based on Miura-ori pattern1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8, Resch pattern3, and square twist pattern9. Among them, the Miura-ori tessellation is the most commonly used. Two folded Miura-based metamaterials were proposed by Schenk and Guest with a negative Poisson’s ratio for in-plane deformations and a positive Poisson’s ratio for out-of-plane bending1. Wei et al. characterised the geometry and elastic response of a simple periodically folded Miura-ori metamaterial, where in-plane and out-of-plane Poisson’s ratios are equal in magnitude, but opposite in sign, and independent of material properties2. Lv et al. reported unexceptional coexistence of positive and negative Poisson’s ratio for Miura-based metamaterials once the whole size of the Miura-ori pattern was taken into consideration3. A reprogrammable mechanical metamaterial was designed by introducing pop-through defects to the Miura-ori tessellation4. Filipov et al. assembled rigidly foldable Miura-ori patterns into zipper-coupled tubes that formed reconfigurable cellular metamaterials with enhanced stiffness5. Wang et al. proposed an in-plane design method for origami-based cylindrical metamaterials with generalised Miura-ori units6. Zhou et al. presented two new types of origami-inspired mechanical metamaterials with negative Poisson’s ratios and bulk modulus based on the Miura-derivative fold patterns7. Recently, Fang et al. designed programmable self-locking origami mechanical metamaterials with non-flat-foldable altered Miura-ori tessellations8. Meanwhile, the Resch pattern and the square twist pattern are gradually appearing as construction parts for mechanical metamaterials. For example, Lv et al. found unusually strong load bearing capability of the mechanical metamaterials based on Resch pattern, which was attributed to the unique way of folding3. Silverberg et al. studied the bistability characteristics of metamaterials constructed from the square twist pattern9. Although the motion of origami structure is utilized in the design of metamaterial to achieve enhanced mechanical property, little work has been done on the kinematic property of the origami pattern itself due to the complexity and multi-degree-of-freedom in the origami motion. One exception is Miura-ori, whose motion is relatively simple and its kinematic analysis has been widely used to reveal the mechanical properties, such as Poisson’s ratio and stiffness1,6,18.
Since most engineering materials used to construct origami structures and metamaterials are relatively rigid, a subset of origami that permits continuous motion between folded and unfolded states along the pre-determined creases without stretching or bending of the facets, rigid origami, has drawn special attention. In the mechanism perspective, the creases of rigid origami can be treated as rotation joints and the paper facets treated as links19,20. A single-vertex pattern with all creases intersected at the vertex is kinematically a spherical linkage21. Then the multi-vertex crease pattern can be modelled as a network of spherical linkages, and its rigidity can be analysed by kinematic approach22,23,24.
Among the vast pool of origami structures, of our particular interest is the waterbomb tube that is made by tessellation of the historically renowned waterbomb bases25. Taking advantage of its folding characteristic, the waterbomb tube has not only been one of the favourites for origami artists26, but also been adopted in practical applications including a stent graft27, a worm robot28, and a deformable robot wheel29. In all of the above-mentioned applications, the waterbomb tube undergoes only radial expansion/contraction, accompanied by the extending/shortening in the axial direction. A detailed analysis of the radial folding behaviour of the waterbomb tube has been published by the authors30, in which a rigorous synchronization of the waterbomb bases along a circumferential row is necessitated, which requires active motion control to realize.
Moreover, playing with a card model of the waterbomb tube reveals that apart from the radial motion, a twist motion also exists starting in the middle of the tube and successively spreading toward both ends, which has not been reported before. Different from the radial motion, the twist of a circumferential row is automatically synchronised, and therefore much easier to generate designed motion and mechanical properties. However, whether the shape change is rigid origami, or whether the facets themselves have to deform, is still unknown. Inspired by a recent work on three-dimensional mechanical metamaterials with twists per axial strain exceeding 2°/%31, this waterbomb tube with twist motion will also be used in the design of tubular mechanical metamaterials. Therefore, in this article we embark on a mission to uncover the twist motion behaviour of the waterbomb tube through a detailed kinematic analysis and seek its corresponding mechanical properties caused by the twist motion.
Results
Geometry and kinematic setup
The crease pattern of a waterbomb tube is obtained by tessellating the six-crease waterbomb bases, shown in Fig. 1a, where a is the half-width of the base, m and n are the number of bases in the vertical and horizontal direction, respectively. There are three different types of vertices marked by black dots, A i , B i and C i , where i is the row number that the waterbomb base locates. When the two vertical sides of the pattern are joined together, a waterbomb tube is obtained. Playing with the card model of the waterbomb tube, it is found that after the tube reaches its most compact radially contracted configuration (diagram I in Fig. 1b), a further axial compression generates a twist motion. The twist motion occurs from the fully squeezed row, where the largest triangular facets of adjacent waterbomb bases coincide and all the vertices A0 at the middle row meet at a single point on the axis of the waterbomb tube (diagram II in Fig. 1b) and then spreads from the middle row toward the rows at both ends of the tube (diagram III in Fig. 1b). To explore the kinematic property of the twist motion, three assumptions of symmetry are made in the subsequent analysis. First, all of the waterbomb bases along the same row behave in an identical manner, and they are placed side-by-side circumferentially. Second, when the twist motion occurs, the twisted base is line-symmetric, i.e., it is rotationally symmetric about a line that passes through the central vertex of the base and is perpendicular to the axis of the tube. Finally, the top and bottom halves of the tube have the same motion behaviour, and the plane that divides the tube into two equal halves is termed as the equatorial plane of the tube.
According to the kinematic equivalence between rigid origami and spherical linkages, the motion around each vertex of the waterbomb tube (Fig. 2a) can be modelled as a spherical 6R linkage, then the tube becomes a network of such linkages, which can be analysed with the matrix method in kinematics with the Denavit and Hartenberg notations32, see Fig. 2b. The axis z k is along crease k or revolute joint k, x k is the common normal from zk−1 to z k , and y k is determined by the right-hand rule. Thus the kinematic geometrical parameter αk(k+1) is defined as the angle between z k and zk+1, positive along the axis xk+1. The kinematic variable θ k is defined as the angle of rotation from x k to xk+1 about the axis z k , which measures the rotation between two sheets joined by the crease or revolute joint k. In the waterbomb tube, there are three kinds of spherical 6R linkages at vertices A i , B i and C i (i indicates the row number of the base) marked by circles in Fig. 2a and presented in Fig. 2c, which are referred to as linkages A i , B i and C i hereafter. The dihedral angles between adjacent sheets connected by the crease are defined as φi,j, φBi,j and φCi,j (j is increasing in a clockwise sequence with a maximum number equal to 6) for vertices A i , B i and C i , respectively.
In general kinematics, the closure equation of a spherical 6R linkage is
where the rotation matrix Q(k+1)k is
which transforms the expression in the (k + 1)th coordinate system to the kth coordinate system and \({{\boldsymbol{Q}}}_{k(k+1)}={{\boldsymbol{Q}}}_{(k+1)k}^{-1}\).
Substituting the geometrical parameters of each vertex into the closure equation (1), their kinematic relationships are obtained. Since each crease links two vertices, the dihedral angle on that crease is related to the motion of spherical linkages on both vertices, and the compatibility between neighbouring linkages A i , B i and C i yields
as presented in Fig. 2c, where the sheets with the same color are identical. These relationships hold for the entire waterbomb pattern. At the fully squeezed configuration as shown in Fig. 2a, all the vertices A0 at the middle row meet at a single point on the axis of the waterbomb tube, and all points E and E′ in the same row form a circle with point A0 as the centre and angle ∠EA0E′ as one of the sector angles, where E and E′ are the midpoints of edges B0C−1 and B′0C′−1 respectively. Since each waterbomb base in the same row has identical motion,
Once these compatibility conditions are satisfied, the motion of the entire tube would be rigid.
Rigid twist motion of the waterbomb tube
The card waterbomb tube in Fig. 1b twists from the fully squeezed row with both line and plane symmetry, so we start from this configuration. Here the line symmetry indicates that the upper half of the waterbomb base is in rotational symmetry to the lower half about a line that passes through the central vertex of the base and is perpendicular to the axis of the tube, and the plane symmetry refers to that it is symmetric about a plane formed by two mid mountain creases. Defining the fully squeezed row as row 0, all vertices A0 coincide at this configuration, that is, rA0, the radius of the circle formed by all vertices A0 about the axis of the waterbomb tube, becomes 0. Consequently, the dihedral angle ϕB0,4 reaches zero. Every crease B0C−1 is parallel to the axis of the tube. For this instance, the spherical 6R linkage at the central vertex A0 on row 0 has just completed its motion with both line and plane symmetry, whereas those at the central vertex A i on the other rows have only plane symmetry30, as shown in Fig. 2a. To facilitate the twist motion, linkage A0 needs to activate its tilting motion with only line symmetry, see Fig. 3a, where the tube is partially twisted. The geometrical parameters of linkage A0 are \({\alpha }_{23}^{{{\bf{A}}}_{0}}={\alpha }_{56}^{{{\bf{A}}}_{0}}={90}^{{\rm{o}}}\), \({\alpha }_{12}^{{{\bf{A}}}_{0}}={\alpha }_{34}^{{{\bf{A}}}_{0}}={\alpha }_{45}^{{{\bf{A}}}_{0}}={\alpha }_{61}^{{{\bf{A}}}_{0}}={45}^{{\rm{o}}}\), and the kinematic variables δ0,j(j = 1, 2, ..., 6) of the highlighted base in Fig. 3a defined according to the D-H notation have the following relationship
By applying equation (4) to the closure equation (1), the following equation can be obtained
Applying the relationship between the kinematic variables δ0,j and dihedral angels φ0,j that δ0,1 = π − ϕ0,1, δ0,2 = π + ϕ0,2, δ0,3 = π + ϕ0,3, δ0,4 = π − ϕ0,4, δ0,5 = π + ϕ0,5, δ0,6 = π + ϕ0,6 to equations (4) and (5), the closure equations of the waterbomb base on row 0 in terms of the dihedral angels, are
Now let us set up a coordinate system as shown in Fig. 3b with its origin at A0, x along the direction of \(\overrightarrow{{{\rm{A}}}_{0}{\rm{E}}}\), z perpendicular to plane EA0E′, i.e., the axis of the waterbomb tube, and y that is determined by the right-hand rule. Taking points D and D′ as the midpoints of creases A0B0 and A0B′0, respectively, we have the following relationship
The coordinates of E and E′ are (a, 0, 0) and \((a\cos \,\frac{2\pi }{n},\,a\sin \,\frac{2\pi }{n},0)\), respectively, since \(\angle {{\rm{EA}}}_{0}{\rm{E}}^{\prime} =2{\pi }/n\). Should the coordinates of B0, C0 and B′0 be denoted by (xB0, yB0, zB0), (xC0, yC0, zC0) and (xB′0, yB′0, zB′0), the following vectors can be obtained
As \(\overline{{{\rm{A}}}_{{\rm{0}}}{{\rm{B}}}_{{\rm{0}}}}\,=\,\overline{{{\rm{A}}}_{{\rm{0}}}{{\rm{B}}^{\prime} }_{{\rm{0}}}}\,=\,\sqrt{2}a,\,\overline{{{\rm{A}}}_{{\rm{0}}}{{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{0}}}}\,=\,\overline{{{\rm{B}}}_{{\rm{0}}}{{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{0}}}}\,=\,\overline{{{\rm{B}}^{\prime} }_{{\rm{0}}}{{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{0}}}}\,=\,a,\) we have
Additionally, since \(\overline{{{\rm{B}}}_{{\rm{0}}}{\rm{E}}}\,=\,\overline{{{\rm{B}}^{\prime} }_{{\rm{0}}}{\rm{E}}^{\prime} }\,=\,a,\) there are
According to the line symmetry of the waterbomb base, the relationship between y coordinates of B0 and B′0 is
Substituting equations (10) and (11) to equation (9) yields
Combining equations (8–12) and applying the law of cosines give
Noting \(\overline{{{\rm{A}}}_{{\rm{0}}}{{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{0}}}}=a\), we can now establish the relationship between φ0,2 and φ0,6 as
where \({\mu }_{1}=4(\cos \,{\phi }_{0,2}+1-\,\cos \,\frac{2\pi }{n})\),
Since ϕB0,4 = 0, linkage B0 degenerates to a spherical 4R linkage with joint 4 frozen and joints 3 and 5 combining into one joint. So its closure equations are
Linkage C0 remains to be a spherical 6R linkage and the closure equations are
which reveals that it is plane-symmetric.
Similarly, we can also set up the closure equations of the other vertices. Motions of those linkages on the rest rows are plane-symmetric and their kinematic relationships are, for linkage A1,
for linkage B i ,
for linkage C i ,
and for linkage Ai+1,
where i = 1, 2, …, (m − 3)/2.
Hence, equations (6) and (14–17) form the kinematic relationship set of the entire tube. Only one variable, φ0,2, is needed to determine the motion of the tube, i.e., the tube is rigidly foldable with one degree of freedom. The kinematic paths of the tube with n = 6 are plotted as in Fig. 3c,d. The range of φ0,2 is determined by the two limiting positions: φ0,2 = 0° and φ0,2 = 90°, see Fig. 4a,b, which correspond to counter-clockwise and clockwise twist, respectively. In Fig. 3c, the blue lines show the kinematic paths of linkages A 0 (in blue solid lines) and A 1 (in blue dash lines) in the twist motion, which indicates that linkage A 0 embarks on the tilting motion, whereas linkage A1 on the adjacent row is still in plane-symmetric motion. From the partial kinematic paths of linkages B0 (in blue solid lines) and C0 (in blue dash lines) in the twist motion in Fig. 3d, it can be seen that starting from zero, ϕB0,4 always remains zero even when linkage A0 undergoes tilting motion, thereby verifying that linkage B0 actually degenerates into a spherical 4 R linkage. In addition, ϕC0,4 is always positive during the twist motion.
Furthermore, the switch from the contraction to the twist motion is, in fact, a motion bifurcation of linkage A0 from a line- and plane- symmetric motion to a line-symmetric motion. This can be clearly demonstrated by plotting the kinematic paths of the contraction motion30 in the same diagrams given in Fig. 3c,d (grey and grey dash lines), in which those bifurcation points are marked by shaded circles. The twist motion further shortens the overall length, L, of the tube with m = 3 (Fig. 3e), but the radii, r, of the vertices become slightly larger (Fig. 3f). It enables all the bases on row 0 to reach its most compact folding configuration at either φ0,2 = 0° or φ0,2 = 90° (Fig. 4a,b). Animation of the rigid twist motion of the waterbomb tube with n = 6 and m = 3 is presented in the Supplementary Video S1.
Having demonstrated from the kinematic analysis that the twist of row 0 is a rigid motion, next we investigate the range of the input kinematic variable φ0,2. Several circumstances need to be considered. First, the region of φ0,2 is constrained by two limit positions where φ0,2 = 0° and φ0,2 = 90°. Second, all the other rows of the tube are found to expand with the twist motion on row 0 by analyzing their kinematic relationship set. So another limit of φ0,2 is generated when the linkage A(m−1)/2 on row (m − 1)/2 is fully deployed with φ(m−1)/2,1 = 180°. And finally, all the other rows except for the twisted one move with plane symmetry, and interferences of facets should be taken into account when determining the range of the rigid twist motion. rAi ≥ 0 and ϕBi,4 ≥ 0 should always be satisfied during the motion, hence the region of φ0,2 is further restricted.
With the range of the input kinematic variable φ0,2, the maximum twist angle between two ends, \({{\rm{B}}}_{0}^{n}{{\rm{B}}}_{0}{{\rm{B}}^{\prime} }_{0}\) and \({{\rm{C}}}_{-1}^{n}{{\rm{C}}}_{-1}{{\rm{C}}^{\prime} }_{-1}\), of row 0 along tube axis in Fig. 3a, θt, can be calculated
where \({\phi }_{0,2\min }\) is the minimum value of φ0,2, and \({\phi }_{0,6\max }\) is calculated by equation (14) when φ0,2 is taken as \({\phi }_{0,2\min }\).
Since only row 0 of a tube generates rigid twist motion while all the other rows keep plane symmetry, the twist angle θt between two ends of the tube is independent of the number of rows m, while affected only by the number of bases in a row n. We take m = 3 to demonstrate the relationship between θt and n, see Fig. 5a. Here n is taken from 4 to 40 since no rigid twist motion exists when n < 4. It can be seen that θt increases when n increases from 4 to 5. This is due to the fact that when n = 4, the twist angle θt is obtained where row 1 is fully expanded with φ1,1 = 180°. The tube cannot reach the most compact folding configuration with φ0,2 = 0° (Fig. 4a) as the case of n = 5, leading to a smaller twist angle. When n surpasses 4, θt monotonically reduces with n for the reason that equation (18) degenerates to θt = 360°/n in this case. The maximum value of θt is reached when n = 5, where θt = 72°.
The rigid twist degree of freedom of the waterbomb tube makes it a suitable candidate for the design of chiral mechanical metamaterials which twist when axially deformed. This property can be characterised by the twist angle per axial strain, θt/ε31. The axial strain, ε, considering compression strain as positive, can be calculated as
where L0 and L t are the overall length of the tube at the fully squeezed configuration with ϕB0,4 = 0 and at the fully twisted configuration with \({\phi }_{0,2}={\phi }_{0,2\min }\), respectively. They can be calculated as
where the cylindrical coordinates of each vertex are
and i = 1, 2, ..., (m − 1)/2.
It is obvious from equations (19–21) that ε is dependent on m, and therefore θt/ε is tuneable by both m and n. First consider the effects of n by taking m = 3 and n from 4 to 40. The relationship between ε and n is presented in Fig. 5b. The change tendency of ε is similar as θtvs. n, but it varies more rapidly. As a result, except for the special case n = 4, θt/ε is in general increased with the increase in n as shown in Fig. 5c, which shows a completely different trend from θt. A minimum of θt/ε = 5.8°/% is obtained when n = 5, which is almost triple of the maximum one in reference31.
The correlation between θt/ε and m, is less clear, as can be seen in Fig. 5d in which n is fixed to 6. In this case the twist angle remains constant as 60° whereas the axial strain is changed with m, leading to the variation of θt/ε. A maximum of θt/ε = 37.2°/% is obtained when m = 7. Therefore, we can design mechanical metamaterials with a wide range of twist angle per axial strain by fine-tuning the geometrical parameters m and n. And such twist can be materialized with minimum efforts as it is a purely rigid motion.
Non-rigid twist of the waterbomb tube
The sufficient condition of the rigid twist motion has been proved to be that the twisted row is fully squeezed with both line and plane symmetry. Now we are going to check its necessity. Firstly, we need to figure out whether the rigid twist motion will start if the line- and plane- symmetric spherical 6R linkage A0 is not fully squeezed, that is, ϕB0,4 ≠ 0, see Fig. 6a. Two adjacent bases on row 0 of such a waterbomb tube is presented in Fig. 6b, where the coordinate system is the same as that in Fig. 3b. According to the spatial analytical geometry, the angle between the crease B′0C′−1 and the axis z, γ, can be calculated
As both planes A0E′A′0 and EA0E′ are perpendicular to crease B′0C′−1 and the axis z, respectively, the angle between the two planes EA0E′ and A0E′A′0 is also γ. Therefore the vertical distance between the vertices A′0 and A0 is
If ϕB0,4 ≠ 0, zA′0 − zA0 ≠ 0. According to the recursion formula in equation (23), the vertical distance between vertex A′0 and plane xA0y increases with the number of bases on row 0, which makes the vertex C′−1 of the nth base that is obtained after twist not match the vertex C−1 of the first base, so that the bases on row 0 cannot complete a cylindrical tessellation. Therefore, no rigid twist motion occurs when the line- and plane- symmetric row of the tube is not fully squeezed. To this point, we can conclude that only the twist of the fully squeezed row in the middle of the tube in Fig. 1b is a rigid motion.
Secondly, the necessity of line and plane symmetry is studied, that is, whether the twist motion is rigid if the twisted row is fully squeezed without line and plane symmetry. Figure 6c shows such a case that the row 3 is fully squeezed with only plane symmetry. Due to the lack of two-fold symmetry necessary to reach the bifurcation configuration, the plane-symmetric linkage A3 cannot bifurcate to a tilting motion. In other words, the twist motion on the fully squeezed row without both line and plane symmetry is not rigid.
Therefore, both the fully squeezed configuration and the line and plane symmetry are necessary for a rigid twist motion. Should either one be violated, the twist motion requires material deformation. Obviously, the twist motion with neither fully squeezed configuration nor line and plane symmetry is not rigid. There are two cases of such non-rigid twist motion. First, when the twist occurs on the fully squeezed row 0, the bases on the other rows is only plane-symmetric and not fully squeezed, so the successive twist of other rows after row 0 reaches its limit positions (Fig. 4a,b) is non-rigid and it cannot occur without material deformation. Second, when the twist motion occurs from a pair of rows near the equatorial plane, which are set as rows 0 and 1 as shown in Fig. 6d, the bases on all rows are not fully squeezed and have only plane symmetry. As a result, there is no rigid twist motion. However, playing with the physical model shows that twist exists in this case as well, and such a process is transmitted from row to row towards the ends of the tube, see Supplementary Videos S2 and S3. So we can safely conclude that, the entire twist motion is due to material deformation. Notice that some rows twist clockwise while the others twist counter-clockwise. The reason is that in such a way, the relative rotation of the two ends of the tube can be cancelled out.
The discovery of the twist motion enables design of origami structures and mechanical metamaterials with graded stiffness through a combination of contraction and twist. Such behaviour is demonstrated by a quasi-static axial compression of a waterbomb tube with n = 6 and m = 8. As can be seen in Fig. 7a, a radial contraction occurs at the beginning of the compression, with a larger shrinkage in the middle than both ends due to boundary constraints, see configuration B. The contraction phase ceases when row 0 and row 1 are fully contracted in configuration C, followed by a simultaneous twist of both rows in opposite directions as seen in configuration D. It is known from the analysis above that the twist is structural deformation instead rigid motion. The twist phase proceeds as row 2 and row −1 twist successively (configurations E and F), after which local material damages appear and the experiment is terminated (configuration G). Regarding stiffness, the force vs. displacement curve in Fig. 7b indicates that the force is low during the contraction phase before configuration C. With the occurrence of twist, the force level is raised significantly as shown in the shaded region of Fig. 7b, which demonstrates a periodic manner corresponding to the successive twist motion. The local peaks in the twist stage are approximately doubled in comparison with that in the contraction stage. Such graded stiffness would enable the structure/metamaterial to autonomously adapt to non-uniform loading environment. And this adaption is achieved purely through a structural transition of deformation phase, without requirement of gradation in the geometric or material dimensions.
Conclusions
We have disclosed and explained the nature of the twist motion of the waterbomb tube that follows the commonly known contraction motion. Through a detailed kinematic analysis, the sufficient and necessary condition of a rigid twist motion has been revealed at the fully squeezed line- and plane- symmetric row in the end of contraction. The rigid twist motion range has also been determined, which is related to both the left/right handed twist and the most expanded configuration at the end rows. The twist angle per axial strain of the waterbomb tube with rigid twist motion has been analysed, which generally increases with the number of bases in a row. In addition, the behaviours of non-rigid twist motions have been studied. The significant difference in stiffness of the waterbomb tube with and without twist has also been verified by experiments. These new findings make the waterbomb tube ideal for the design of programmable and tuneable mechanical metamaterials.
Methods
The card model shown in Fig. 1b was made from conventional cards obtained from stationary stores. The prototype shown in the Supplementary Video S2 was made from an ENDURO Ice sheet of 0.29 mm in thickness. The prototype shown in the Supplementary Video S3 was fabricated as a complete structure by a 3D printing machine OBJET Connex 350© using two types of materials: a hard plastic-like one known as Verowhite© for the facets and a soft rubber-like one called Tangoblack+ © for the creases, resulting in the facets being much stiffer than the creases. The prototype had n = 6, m = 8, a = 23 mm, wall thickness t = 1 mm, and an initial dihedral angle θ = 144°, where θ is the angle between the two largest triangle triangular facets of a base on row 0.
To demonstrate the graded stiffness of the waterbomb tube, a tube made from ENDURO Ice material with 0.29 mm in thickness and m = 8, was compressed in the longitudinal direction from the larger uniform radius configuration with an initial dihedral angle θ = 144°. It has the following geometrical parameters: n = 6 and a = 22.5 mm. The experiment was conducted on an Instron 5982 testing machine with a load cell of 100 N. The loading speed was chosen as 5 mm/min so that material strain rate effects could be safely neglected. Regarding boundary conditions, it was determined after several rounds of trial-and-errors that placing foams of 15 mm in thickness at each end of the tube, as shown in Fig. 7a, was able to generate a roughly symmetric and stable deformation.
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Acknowledgements
H.F. is grateful to the China Scholarship Council for the State Scholarship Fund and to Tianjin University for providing the University PhD Scholarship. Y.C. and J.M. would like to thank the financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Projects Nos 51721003 and 51575377). Z.Y. wishes to acknowledge the support of Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-16-1-0339). He was a visiting professor at Tianjin University during the course of this research.
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Y.C. and Z.Y. initiated and directed the research. H.F. carried out research, modelling, and prepared figures under the supervision of Y.C. and J.M., H.F. and J.M. wrote the manuscript.
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Feng, H., Ma, J., Chen, Y. et al. Twist of Tubular Mechanical Metamaterials Based on Waterbomb Origami. Sci Rep 8, 9522 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-27877-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-27877-1
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