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Spatiotemporally Programmable Surfaces via Viscoelastic Shell Snapping

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By Yuzhen Chen, Tianzhen Liu, Lihua Jin*

Many species can dynamically alter their skin textures to enhance their motility and survivability. Despite the enormous efforts on designing bio-inspired materials with tunable surface textures, developing spatiotemporally programmable and reconfigurable textural morphing without complex control remains challenging. Herein, a design strategy is proposed to achieve surfaces with such properties. The surfaces comprise an array of unit cells with broadly tailored temporal responses. By arranging the unit cells differently, the surfaces can exhibit various spatiotemporal responses, which can be easily reconfigured by disassembling and rearranging the unit cells. Specifically, viscoelastic shells as the unit cells is adopted, which can be pneumatically actuated to a concave state, and recover the initial convex state sometime after the load is removed. It is shown computationally and experimentally that the recovery time can be widely tuned by the geometry and material viscoelasticity of the shells. By assembling such shells with different recovery times, surfaces with pre-programmed spatiotemporal textural morphing under simple pneumatic actuation is built, and temporal evolution of patterns, such as digit numbers and emoji, and spatiotemporal control of friction are demonstrated. This work opens up new avenues in designing spatiotemporal morphing surfaces that could be employed for programming mechanical, optical, and electrical properties.

Keywords: pneumatic actuation, pseudo-bistability, reconfigurable, spatiotemporalprogramming, textural morphing, viscoelastic shell

https://doi.org/10.1002/aisy.202100270

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