Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: MacNider, Brianna, Xiu, Haning, Qian, Kai, Frankel, Ian, Kim, Hyunsun Alicia, Boechler, Nicholas
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.15725
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866910507302125568
author MacNider, Brianna
Xiu, Haning
Qian, Kai
Frankel, Ian
Kim, Hyunsun Alicia
Boechler, Nicholas
author_facet MacNider, Brianna
Xiu, Haning
Qian, Kai
Frankel, Ian
Kim, Hyunsun Alicia
Boechler, Nicholas
contents Passive transformation of waves via nonlinear systems is ubiquitous in settings ranging from acoustics to optics and electromagnetics. Passivity is of particular importance for responding rapidly to stimuli and nonlinearity enormously expands signal transformability compared to linear systems due to the breaking of superposition. It is well known that different types of nonlinearity yield vastly different effects on propagating signals, which raises the question of ``what precise nonlinearity is the best for a given wave tailoring application?'' Considering a one-dimensional spring-mass chain as a testbed, we couple the shape optimization of structures for tailored nonlinear constitutive responses with reduced-order nonlinear dynamical inverse design. Using minimization of peak kinetic energy transmission from impact as a case study, we identify ideal nonlinear constitutive responses and the geometries needed to achieve them. As part of this, we show the large sensitivity of this metric to small changes in nonlinearity, and thus the need for high precision, free-form nonlinearity tailoring. We validate our predictions using impact experiments in a chain of nonlinear springs and masses. This work sets the foundation for broader passive nonlinear mechanical wave tailoring material design, with applications to computing, signal processing, shock mitigation, and autonomous materials.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2403_15725
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Customizable wave tailoring materials enabled by nonlinear bilevel inverse design
MacNider, Brianna
Xiu, Haning
Qian, Kai
Frankel, Ian
Kim, Hyunsun Alicia
Boechler, Nicholas
Materials Science
Pattern Formation and Solitons
Passive transformation of waves via nonlinear systems is ubiquitous in settings ranging from acoustics to optics and electromagnetics. Passivity is of particular importance for responding rapidly to stimuli and nonlinearity enormously expands signal transformability compared to linear systems due to the breaking of superposition. It is well known that different types of nonlinearity yield vastly different effects on propagating signals, which raises the question of ``what precise nonlinearity is the best for a given wave tailoring application?'' Considering a one-dimensional spring-mass chain as a testbed, we couple the shape optimization of structures for tailored nonlinear constitutive responses with reduced-order nonlinear dynamical inverse design. Using minimization of peak kinetic energy transmission from impact as a case study, we identify ideal nonlinear constitutive responses and the geometries needed to achieve them. As part of this, we show the large sensitivity of this metric to small changes in nonlinearity, and thus the need for high precision, free-form nonlinearity tailoring. We validate our predictions using impact experiments in a chain of nonlinear springs and masses. This work sets the foundation for broader passive nonlinear mechanical wave tailoring material design, with applications to computing, signal processing, shock mitigation, and autonomous materials.
title Customizable wave tailoring materials enabled by nonlinear bilevel inverse design
topic Materials Science
Pattern Formation and Solitons
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.15725