Abstract

The topologically polarized isostatic lattices discovered by Kane and Lubensky (2014, Nat. Phys. 10, 39–45) challenged the standard effective medium theories used in the modeling of many truss-based materials and metamaterials. As a matter of fact, these exhibit Parity (P) asymmetric distributions of zero modes that induce a P-asymmetric elastic behavior, both of which cannot be reproduced within Cauchy elasticity. Here, we propose a new effective medium theory baptized “microtwist elasticity” capable of rendering polarization effects on a macroscopic scale. The theory is valid for trusses on the brink of a polarized-unpolarized phase transition in which case they necessarily exhibit more periodic zero modes than they have dimensions. By mapping each periodic zero mode to a macroscopic degree of freedom, the microtwist theory ends up being a kinematically enriched theory. Microtwist elasticity is constructed thanks to leading order two-scale asymptotics and its constitutive and balance equations are derived for a fairly generic isostatic truss: the Kagome lattice. Various numerical and analytical calculations, of the shape and distribution of zero modes, of dispersion diagrams and of polarization effects, systematically show the quality of the proposed effective medium theory.

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