Abstract

Here we review recent studies of mechanical metamaterials originating from or closely related to marginally jammed solids. Unlike previous approaches mainly focusing on the design of building blocks to form periodic metamaterials, the design and realization of such metamaterials exploit two special aspects of jammed solids, disorder and isostaticity. Due to the disorder, every single bond of jammed solids is unique. Such a bond uniqueness facilitates the flexible adjustment of the global and local elastic responses of unstressed spring networks derived from jammed solids, leading to auxetic materials with negative Poisson’s ratio and bionic metamaterials to realize allostery and flow controls. The disorder also causes plastic instabilities of jammed solids under load. The jammed networks are thus inherently metamaterials exhibiting multi-functions such as auxeticity, negative compressibility, and energy absorption. Taking advantage of isostaticity, topological mechanical metamaterials analogous to electronic materials such as topological insulators have also been realized, while jammed networks inherently occupy such topological features. The presence of disorder greatly challenges our understanding of jammed solids, but it also provides us with more freedoms and opportunities to design mechanical metamaterials.

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