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Main Authors: Joshi, Sarvesh, Mousavi, S. Mohammad, Hamel, Craig M., Gaitanaros, Stavros, Purohit, Prashant K., Alberdi, Ryan, Bouklas, Nikolaos
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.00227
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author Joshi, Sarvesh
Mousavi, S. Mohammad
Hamel, Craig M.
Gaitanaros, Stavros
Purohit, Prashant K.
Alberdi, Ryan
Bouklas, Nikolaos
author_facet Joshi, Sarvesh
Mousavi, S. Mohammad
Hamel, Craig M.
Gaitanaros, Stavros
Purohit, Prashant K.
Alberdi, Ryan
Bouklas, Nikolaos
contents Architected metamaterials such as foams and lattices exhibit a wide range of properties governed by microstructural instabilities and emerging phase transformations. Their macroscopic response--including energy dissipation during impact, large recoverable deformations, morphing between configurations, and auxetic behavior--remains difficult to capture with conventional continuum models, which often rely on discrete approaches that limit scalability. We propose a nonlocal continuum formulation that captures both stable and unstable responses of elastic architected metamaterials. The framework extends anisotropic hyperelasticity by introducing nonlocal variables and internal length scales reflective of microstructural features. Local polyconvex free-energy models are systematically augmented with two families of non-(poly)convex energies, enabling both metastable and bistable responses. Implementation in a finite element framework enables solution using a hybrid monolithic--staggered strategy. Simulations capture densification fronts, forward and reverse transformations, hysteresis loops, imperfection sensitivity, and globally coordinated auxetic modes. Overall, this framework provides a robust foundation for accelerated modeling of instability-driven phenomena in architected materials, while enabling extensions to anisotropic, dissipative, and active systems as well as integration with data-driven and machine learning approaches.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2510_00227
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Instabilities and Phase Transformations in Architected Metamaterials: a Gradient-Enhanced Continuum Approach
Joshi, Sarvesh
Mousavi, S. Mohammad
Hamel, Craig M.
Gaitanaros, Stavros
Purohit, Prashant K.
Alberdi, Ryan
Bouklas, Nikolaos
Computational Physics
Architected metamaterials such as foams and lattices exhibit a wide range of properties governed by microstructural instabilities and emerging phase transformations. Their macroscopic response--including energy dissipation during impact, large recoverable deformations, morphing between configurations, and auxetic behavior--remains difficult to capture with conventional continuum models, which often rely on discrete approaches that limit scalability. We propose a nonlocal continuum formulation that captures both stable and unstable responses of elastic architected metamaterials. The framework extends anisotropic hyperelasticity by introducing nonlocal variables and internal length scales reflective of microstructural features. Local polyconvex free-energy models are systematically augmented with two families of non-(poly)convex energies, enabling both metastable and bistable responses. Implementation in a finite element framework enables solution using a hybrid monolithic--staggered strategy. Simulations capture densification fronts, forward and reverse transformations, hysteresis loops, imperfection sensitivity, and globally coordinated auxetic modes. Overall, this framework provides a robust foundation for accelerated modeling of instability-driven phenomena in architected materials, while enabling extensions to anisotropic, dissipative, and active systems as well as integration with data-driven and machine learning approaches.
title Instabilities and Phase Transformations in Architected Metamaterials: a Gradient-Enhanced Continuum Approach
topic Computational Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.00227