Abstract
Stowage schemes based on origami wrapping patterns are useful for the design of various deployable spacecraft structures. These origami patterns allow for the compact stowage of flat sheets of small thickness. Typically, some other structure is needed to stiffen this thin sheet when it is fully deployed and flat. This paper describes a class of thin-shell structures that can be compactly stowed using origami wrapping methods but have a corrugated form when deployed. These structures cannot reach a flat state by design. The persistent corrugations provide stiffness without the need for an external structure, thus leading to overall savings in mass and complexity. The geometrical design of the corrugations is highly tunable. This paper describes a method for generating the form of these folding structures; the method guarantees that the structure can be unstrained both when compactly wrapped and when fully deployed. Test articles are fabricated to demonstrate the concept, and stowage experiments and stiffness experiments are conducted. A structural finite element modeling procedure is described to predict the deployed stiffness of these structures, and the stiffness predictions match the experimental results.
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