{"title":"Physics-based discrete models for magneto-mechanical metamaterials","authors":"Gabriel Alkuino , Teng Zhang","doi":"10.1016/j.jmps.2024.105759","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>Magneto-mechanical metamaterials are emerging smart materials whose mechanical responses can be tailored through structure architecture and magnetic interactions. The latter provides additional freedom in the material design space and leads to novel behaviors due to its nonlocal nature. The enriched functionalities open new possibilities in various applications, such as actuators, energy absorbers, and soft robots. However, the nonlinear and nonlocal coupling between elastic and magnetic forces poses a great challenge in the modeling and simulation of these systems, further hindering theory-based rational design strategies. Here, we focus on a class of magneto-mechanical metamaterials comprising elastic solids embedded with rigid permanent magnets. The clear separation between elastic and magnetic forces simplifies the design and fabrication process, yet their nonlocal interplay still allows for complex behaviors. We present a simulation framework for such magneto-mechanical metamaterials by combining a lattice spring model for the elastic solid with the dipole model for the magnetic interactions and implementing it in the LAMMPS molecular dynamics software. We demonstrate the capabilities of our framework by simulating a few representative structures, including shape-locking lattice metamaterials, a soft cellular solid with controllable buckling, and a metamaterial chain with phase-transforming behavior. For the shape-locking lattice metamaterials, we successfully capture the magnetic-actuation-driven reconfiguration and the nonlinear mechanical response of the curved lattices. For the soft cellular solid, we identify its buckling patterns under external non-uniform magnetic fields and simulate a buckling evolution process consistent with experiments. For the metamaterial chain, we include the strong long-range interactions among the embedded magnets and reproduce the controllable phase transitions in the experiments. Our work provides a simple yet versatile simulation methodology to investigate the nonlinear mechanical behaviors in the presence of strong external and internal magnetic forces, which will facilitate the design and analysis of magneto-mechanical materials. It can also be applied to other magnetically-driven smart structures, such as soft robots.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":17331,"journal":{"name":"Journal of The Mechanics and Physics of Solids","volume":"191 ","pages":"Article 105759"},"PeriodicalIF":6.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of The Mechanics and Physics of Solids","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022509624002254","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2024/7/6 0:00:00","PubModel":"Epub","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"MATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Magneto-mechanical metamaterials are emerging smart materials whose mechanical responses can be tailored through structure architecture and magnetic interactions. The latter provides additional freedom in the material design space and leads to novel behaviors due to its nonlocal nature. The enriched functionalities open new possibilities in various applications, such as actuators, energy absorbers, and soft robots. However, the nonlinear and nonlocal coupling between elastic and magnetic forces poses a great challenge in the modeling and simulation of these systems, further hindering theory-based rational design strategies. Here, we focus on a class of magneto-mechanical metamaterials comprising elastic solids embedded with rigid permanent magnets. The clear separation between elastic and magnetic forces simplifies the design and fabrication process, yet their nonlocal interplay still allows for complex behaviors. We present a simulation framework for such magneto-mechanical metamaterials by combining a lattice spring model for the elastic solid with the dipole model for the magnetic interactions and implementing it in the LAMMPS molecular dynamics software. We demonstrate the capabilities of our framework by simulating a few representative structures, including shape-locking lattice metamaterials, a soft cellular solid with controllable buckling, and a metamaterial chain with phase-transforming behavior. For the shape-locking lattice metamaterials, we successfully capture the magnetic-actuation-driven reconfiguration and the nonlinear mechanical response of the curved lattices. For the soft cellular solid, we identify its buckling patterns under external non-uniform magnetic fields and simulate a buckling evolution process consistent with experiments. For the metamaterial chain, we include the strong long-range interactions among the embedded magnets and reproduce the controllable phase transitions in the experiments. Our work provides a simple yet versatile simulation methodology to investigate the nonlinear mechanical behaviors in the presence of strong external and internal magnetic forces, which will facilitate the design and analysis of magneto-mechanical materials. It can also be applied to other magnetically-driven smart structures, such as soft robots.
期刊介绍:
The aim of Journal of The Mechanics and Physics of Solids is to publish research of the highest quality and of lasting significance on the mechanics of solids. The scope is broad, from fundamental concepts in mechanics to the analysis of novel phenomena and applications. Solids are interpreted broadly to include both hard and soft materials as well as natural and synthetic structures. The approach can be theoretical, experimental or computational.This research activity sits within engineering science and the allied areas of applied mathematics, materials science, bio-mechanics, applied physics, and geophysics.
The Journal was founded in 1952 by Rodney Hill, who was its Editor-in-Chief until 1968. The topics of interest to the Journal evolve with developments in the subject but its basic ethos remains the same: to publish research of the highest quality relating to the mechanics of solids. Thus, emphasis is placed on the development of fundamental concepts of mechanics and novel applications of these concepts based on theoretical, experimental or computational approaches, drawing upon the various branches of engineering science and the allied areas within applied mathematics, materials science, structural engineering, applied physics, and geophysics.
The main purpose of the Journal is to foster scientific understanding of the processes of deformation and mechanical failure of all solid materials, both technological and natural, and the connections between these processes and their underlying physical mechanisms. In this sense, the content of the Journal should reflect the current state of the discipline in analysis, experimental observation, and numerical simulation. In the interest of achieving this goal, authors are encouraged to consider the significance of their contributions for the field of mechanics and the implications of their results, in addition to describing the details of their work.