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arXiv:2404.13351v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: As a result of evolution, many biological materials have developed irregular structures that lead to outstanding mechanical properties, like high stiffness-to-weight ratios and good energy absorption. To reproduce these properties in synthetic materials, biomimicry typically replicates the irregular natural structure, often leading to fabrication challenges. Here, we present a bioinspired material design method that instead reduces the irregular natural structure to a finite set of building blocks, also known as tiles, and rules to connect them, and then uses these elements as instructions to generate synthetic materials with mechanical properties similar to the biological materials. We demonstrate the method using the pericarp of the orange, a member of the citrus family known for its protective, energy-absorbing capabilities. We generate polymer samples and characterize them under quasi-static and dynamic compression and observe spatially-varying stiffness and good energy absorption, as seen in the biological materials. By quantifying which tiles and connectivity rules locally deform in response to loading, we determine how to spatially control the stiffness and energy absorption.

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