Abstract

The present study focuses on the mechanical chirality in plate-type topologically interlocked material systems. Topologically interlocked material (TIM) systems are a class of dense architectured materials for which the mechanical response emerges from the elastic behavior of the building blocks and the contact-frictions interactions between the blocks. The resulting mechanical behavior is strongly non-linear due to the stability-instability characteristics of the internal load transfer pattern. Two tessellations are considered (square and hexagonal) and patches from each are used as templates. While individual building blocks are achiral, chirality emerges from the assembly pattern. The measure of microstructure circulation is introduced to identify the geometric chirality of TIM systems. TIM systems identified as geometrically chiral are demonstrated to possess mechanical chiral response with a force-torque coupling under transverse mechanical loading of the TIM plate. The chiral length is found to be constant during the elastic response, yet size-dependent. During nonlinear deformation, the chiral length scale increases significantly and again exhibits a strong size dependence. The principle of dissection is introduced to transform non-chiral TIM systems into chiral ones. In the linear deformation regime, the framework of chiral elasticity is shown to be applicable. In the non-linear deformation regime, chirality is found to strongly affect the mechanical behavior more significantly than in the linear regime. Experiments on selected TIM systems validate key findings of the main computational study with the finite element method.

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