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      Topological mechanics of origami and kirigami

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          Abstract

          Origami and kirigami have emerged as potential tools for the design of mechanical metamaterials whose properties such as curvature, Poisson ratio, and existence of metastable states can be tuned using purely geometric criteria. A major obstacle to exploiting this property is the scarcity of tools to identify and program the flexibility of fold patterns. We exploit a recent connection between spring networks and quantum topological states to design origami with localized folding motions at boundaries and study them both experimentally and theoretically. These folding motions exist due to an underlying topological invariant rather than a local imbalance between constraints and degrees of freedom. We give a simple example of a quasi-1D folding pattern that realizes such topological states. We also demonstrate how to generalize these topological design principles to two dimensions. A striking consequence is that a domain wall between two topologically distinct, mechanically rigid structures is deformable even when constraints locally match the degrees of freedom.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2015-08-04
          2016-03-30
          Article
          10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.135501
          1508.00795
          a6b9a999-67d7-40ae-981a-317fd865704c

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 135501 (2016)
          5 pages, 3 figures + ~5 pages SI
          cond-mat.soft

          Condensed matter
          Condensed matter

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