
A team of engineers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and elsewhere have found a way to mimic the physical-stress-dissipating behaviour of the layered material found in the shells of marine organisms, such as seashell nacre, by programming individual layers of synthetic material to work collaboratively under stress. The new material design is poised to enhance energy-absorbing systems such as wearable bandages and car bumpers with multistage responses that adapt to collision severity.
Many past studies have focused on reverse engineering to replicate the behaviour of natural materials such as bone, feathers and wood to reproduce their nonlinear responses to mechanical stress. A new study, led by the civil and environmental engineering professor Shelly Zhang and Professor Ole Sigmund of the Technical University of Denmark, looked beyond reverse engineering to develop a framework for programmable multi-layered materials capable of responding to local disturbances through microscale interconnections.
‘This work was born out of a discussion with my collaborator, Professor Sigmund, about how we already can achieve some very extreme behaviours, but there’s always a physical limit or upper bound that single materials can achieve, even with programming,’ Zhang said. ‘That led us to consider what kind of engineering could enable some of the crazy material behaviours needed in real life. For example, extreme buckling behaviours could help dissipate energy for things like car bumpers.’
That is when the team turned their attention to biological materials with multiple layers serving a different purpose, and how they could fabricate a synthetic material and use internal, microscale programming and optimisation to control its response to mechanical stress and strain.
‘We landed on the idea to design multi-layered materials with each layer being capable of exhibiting different properties and behaviours,’ Zhang said.
But not stopping there, the team pushed themselves to include the ability of individual layers to collaborate and essentially behave collectively as one. ‘Our new framework presents several advantages over existing methodologies for nonlinear stress-strain responses,’ Zhang said. ‘It optimises nacre-like multiple layers along with their interconnections in a continuum setup, which significantly expands the design space compared to similar work involving a single-layer setup or lattice structures.’
During fabrication, the team learned some lessons. The theoretical idea behind this work is to have an infinitely periodic material. Still, the team must fabricate finite units, and it was to be expected that the theoretical material and the actual fabricated material would exhibit different behaviours.
‘The discrepancy we found is something that will always happen in real life,’ Zhang said. ‘But we can harness this information to intentionally programme the sequence of the buckling of each of the individual cells in assembly, store some information inside, and then later we can decode the information. It was fascinating to capture this discrepancy and for it to end up providing information needed to improve the work.’
There is still a lot of work to be done to scale up fabrication for this type of material, but Zhang said that one valuable thing learned from this study is that when people collaborate, they achieve much greater things. ‘I think it works the same for materials,’ Zhang said. ‘When different materials collectively work together, they can do things that are much more impactful than if they do things individually.’
The research has been published in Science Advances.