Buckling is a loss of structural stability. It occurs in long slender structures or thin plate structures which is subjected to compressive forces. For the structural materials, such a sudden change in shape has been considered to be avoided. In this study, we utilize the Au nanowire's buckling instability for the electrical measurement. We confirmed that the high-strength single crystalline Au nanowire with an aspect ratio of 150 and 230-nm-diameter shows classical Euler buckling under constant compressive force without failure. The buckling instability enables stable contact between the Au nanowire and the substrate without any damage. Clearly, the electrical measurement shows a transition of the contact resistance between the nanowire and the substrate from the Sharvin (ballistic limit) mode to the Holm (Ohmic) mode during deformation, enabling reliable electrical measurements. This study suggests Au nanowire probes exhibiting structural instability to ensure stable and precise electrical measurements at the nanoscale.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2022.105199 | DOI Listing |
Macromol Rapid Commun
December 2024
School of Materials Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA.
Examining the mechanical properties of polymer thin films is crucial for high-performance applications such as displays, coatings, sensors, and thermal management. It is important to design thin film microstructures that excel in high-demand situations without compromising mechanical integrity. Here, a polymer blend of polystyrene (PS) and polyisoprene (PI) is used as a model to explore microscale deformation behavior under uniaxial mechanical testing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
November 2024
Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Nöthnitzer Straße 38, 01187 Dresden, Germany.
Buckling instabilities driven by tissue growth underpin key developmental events such as the folding of the brain. Tissue growth is disordered due to cell-to-cell variability, but the effects of this variability on buckling are unknown. Here, we analyze what is perhaps the simplest setup of this problem: the buckling of an elastic rod with fixed ends driven by spatially varying, yet highly symmetric growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
October 2024
School of Mechanics and Construction Engineering, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, China.
Delamination is a common type of damage in composite laminates that can significantly affect the integrity and stability of structural components. This study investigates the post-buckling behavior of carbon fiber-reinforced epoxy composite laminates with embedded delamination under quasi-static compression. Experimental tests were conducted using an electronic universal material testing machine to measure deformation and load-bearing capacity in the post-buckling stage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPNAS Nexus
October 2024
Centre for Condensed Matter Theory, Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, Karnataka 560 012, India.
Chiral active materials display odd dynamical effects in both their elastic and viscous responses. We show that the most symmetric mesophase with 2D odd elasticity in three dimensions is chiral, polar, and columnar, with 2D translational order in the plane perpendicular to the columns and no elastic restoring force for their relative sliding. We derive its hydrodynamic equations from those of a chiral active variant of model H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
November 2024
Laboratory of Artificial & Natural Evolution (LANE), Department of Genetics & Evolution, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland; SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland. Electronic address:
The glabrous skin of the rhinarium (naked nose) of many mammalian species exhibits a polygonal pattern of grooves that retain physiological fluid, thereby keeping their nose wet and, among other effects, facilitating the collection of chemosensory molecules. Here, we perform volumetric imaging of whole-mount rhinaria from sequences of embryonic and juvenile cows, dogs, and ferrets. We demonstrate that rhinarial polygonal domains are not placode-derived skin appendages but arise through a self-organized mechanical process consisting of the constrained growth and buckling of the epidermal basal layer, followed by the formation of sharp epidermal creases exactly facing an underlying network of stiff blood vessels.
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