Self-locking and stiffening deployable tubular structures.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Centre for Innovative Structures and Materials, School of Engineering, RMIT University, Melbourne, VIC 3001, Australia.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Deployable tubular structures can transform from compact to functional forms and are useful in various engineering applications.
  • These structures face challenges in balancing flexibility and stiffness, but using compliant materials helps enhance their adaptability, albeit often at the cost of strength under pressure.
  • The proposed solution utilizes origami-inspired techniques and a self-locking mechanism to improve performance, resulting in structures that can adapt their properties for different scenarios, paving the way for advancements in deployment technology.

Article Abstract

Deployable tubular structures, designed for functional expansion, serve a wide range of applications, from flexible pipes to stiff structural elements. These structures, which transform from compact states, are crucial for creating adaptive solutions across engineering and scientific fields. A significant barrier to advancing their performance is balancing expandability with stiffness. Using compliant materials, these structures achieve more flexible transformations than those possible with rigid mechanisms. However, they typically exhibit reduced stiffness when subjected to external pressures (e.g., tube wall loading). Here, we utilize origami-inspired techniques and internal stiffeners to meet conflicting performance requirements. A self-locking mechanism is proposed, which combines the folding behavior observed in curved-crease origami and elastic shell buckling. This mechanism employs simple shell components, including internal diaphragms that undergo pseudofolding in a confined boundary condition to enable a snap-through transition. We reveal that the deployed tube is self-locked through geometrical interference, creating a braced tubular arrangement. This arrangement gives a direction-dependent structural performance, ranging from elastic response to crushing, thereby offering the potential for programmable structures. We demonstrate that our approach can advance existing deployment mechanisms (e.g., coiled and inflatable systems) and create diverse structural designs (e.g., metamaterials, adaptive structures, cantilevers, and lightweight panels).Weanticipate our design to be a starting point to drive technological advancement in real-world deployable tubular structures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11459150PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2409062121DOI Listing

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