You're invited to attend
"Programmable Metamaterials And Structures: Design And Validation"
by
Shelly Zhang
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and
the Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering
| University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign (UIUC)
Thursday, September 7
3:30 - 4:30 p.m.
Student Success Center, Clary Theater
About the Seminar:
Programmable materials and structures hold great potential for various applications, such as robotics, biomedical devices, and aerospace structures. The rational design and realization of programmed behaviors in these systems play important roles to enable functional devices. This talk will first introduce a multi-material and multi-physics topology optimization approach, which simultaneously optimizes both the geometry and material heterogeneity to achieve target behaviors and functionalities.
To encode desired mechanical functionality into structures, we employ the proposed approach to inverse design soft composite structures that achieve complex target mechanical responses under large deformations. A library of diverse designs is created, showcasing a wide range of precisely-programmed nonlinear responses, such as multi-bulking and multi-plateau. We reveal the underlying deformation mechanisms and demonstrate how different hyperelastic materials seamlessly collaborate to achieve those target responses. In addition, the properties of materials and structures typically remain fixed after being constructed. To enable reprogrammable behaviors, we tailor the proposed approach to discover magneto-active materials that achieve tunable buckling and switchable shape morphing, controlled by magnetic fields. The obtained magnetic systems exhibit one response under mechanical loading, and switch to a distinct response by applying magnetic fields.
We explore multimaterial manufacturing techniques to fabricate a suite of mechanical and magnetic structures and experimentally validate their programmed behaviors. These complex yet programmable responses are enabled by the interactions among unique geometry, material nonlinearity, large deformations, and magnetic actuation (when applicable). The good agreement among target, simulation, and experiment demonstrates that the proposed optimization-driven framework, when integrated with hybrid manufacturing techniques, has the potential to systematically design, inform, and create innovative multi-functional materials and structures for various engineering applications.
About the Speaker:
Dr. Xiaojia Shelly Zhang is a David C. Crawford Assistant Professor at the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign (UIUC). She directs the MISSION (MuIti-functional Structures and Systems desIgn OptimizatioN) Laboratory. Dr. Zhang holds B.S. and M.S. degrees from UIUC and a Ph.D. degree from Georgia Tech. She is the recipient of the 2021 National Science Foundation CAREER award, the 2022 ASME Journal of Applied Mechanics Award, the 2022 DARPA Young Faculty Award (YFA), and the 2023 AFOSR Young Investigator (YIP) award.
Dr. Zhang serves on the Executive Committee of International Society of Structural and Multidisciplinary Optimization (ISSMO) and an Review Editor for the Journal of Structural and Multidisciplinary Optimization and a Guest Editor for Extreme Mechanics Letter and Journal of Engineering Structures. Her research explores multi-physics topology optimization, stochastic learning algorithms, and additive manufacturing to develop multi-functional, sustainable, and resilient metamaterials, structures, and robots for applications at different scales.