Mechanical metamaterials.

auxetics. cloaking homogenisation metamaterials pentamode space-time media topological crystals

Journal

Reports on progress in physics. Physical Society (Great Britain)
ISSN: 1361-6633
Titre abrégé: Rep Prog Phys
Pays: England
ID NLM: 19620690R

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
04 Aug 2023
Historique:
received: 30 08 2022
accepted: 21 06 2023
medline: 22 6 2023
pubmed: 22 6 2023
entrez: 21 6 2023
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Mechanical metamaterials, also known as architected materials, are rationally designed composites, aiming at elastic behaviors and effective mechanical properties beyond ('meta') those of their individual ingredients-qualitatively and/or quantitatively. Due to advances in computational science and manufacturing, this field has progressed considerably throughout the last decade. Here, we review its mathematical basis in the spirit of a tutorial, and summarize the conceptual as well as experimental state-of-the-art. This summary comprises disordered, periodic, quasi-periodic, and graded anisotropic functional architectures, in one, two, and three dimensions, covering length scales ranging from below one micrometer to tens of meters. Examples include extreme ordinary linear elastic behavior from artificial crystals, e.g. auxetics and pentamodes, 'negative' effective properties, behavior beyond classical linear elasticity, e.g. arising from local resonances, chirality, beyond-nearest-neighbor interactions, quasi-crystalline mechanical metamaterials, topological band gaps, cloaking based on coordinate transformations and on scattering cancelation, seismic protection, nonlinear and programmable metamaterials, as well as space-time-periodic architectures.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37343550
doi: 10.1088/1361-6633/ace069
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

© 2023 IOP Publishing Ltd.

Auteurs

Richard Craster (R)

Department of Mathematics, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom.
UMI 2004 Abraham de Moivre-CNRS, Imperial College, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom.

Sébastien Guenneau (S)

UMI 2004 Abraham de Moivre-CNRS, Imperial College, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom.

Muamer Kadic (M)

Institut FEMTO-ST, UMR 6174, CNRS, Université de Bourgogne Franche-Comté, Besançon, France.

Martin Wegener (M)

Institute of Applied Physics and Institute of Nanotechnology, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), 76128 Karlsruhe, Germany.

Classifications MeSH