Abstract

Auxetic mechanical metamaterials contract or expand laterally when subjected to compressive or tensile load in the axial direction and offer potential benefits in areas such as flexible electronics, aerospace, and soft actuators. Nevertheless, when metamaterials are fabricated using conventional methods, their configurations and properties are fixed, which prohibits adaptation to the specific geometric requirements of their application environment. This limits their further development. This paper proposes an auxetic mechanical metamaterial with a negative Poisson's ratio and energy absorption capability. Compression specimens are fabricated with LCD photo-curable printing technology. The deformation mechanism and in-plane compression characteristics are examined through experimental and numerical simulation methods. The influence of unit cell geometrical control parameters on Poisson's ratio and energy absorption are also explored. The results indicate the dominant deformation mechanism of metamaterial during in-plane compression is bending deformation. The negative Poisson's ratio behavior is more pronounced when compressing along the X direction than along the Y direction, and the specimens also exhibit energy absorption capacity. In addition, the metamaterials prepared by 4D printing technology can be transformed from one configuration to another under external stimuli stimulation and force, and exhibit different mechanical properties, realizing programmable and reconfigurable, further expanding their application range.

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