Issue 26, 2024

Imprinting reversible deformations on a compressed soft rod network

Abstract

We present emergent behaviour of storing mechanical deformation in compressed soft cellular materials (a network of soft polymeric rods). Under an applied compressive strain field, the soft cellular material transits from an elastic regime to a ‘pseudo-plastic' regime (not to be confused with pseudoplasticity in fluids). In the elastic phase, it is capable of forgetting (or relaxing) any applied indentation once the applied indentation is removed. This relaxation will be determined by the visco-elasticity and internal relaxation timescales in polymeric hyperelastic cellular materials. In the pseudo-plastic phase, however, the material is capable of storing local indentation (or deformation) indefinitely. This deformation can be erased via removal of the external strain field and is therefore reversible. We characterise this behaviour experimentally and present a simple model that makes use of friction for understanding this behavior.

Graphical abstract: Imprinting reversible deformations on a compressed soft rod network

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Jan 2024
Accepted
30 May 2024
First published
02 Jun 2024

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 5053-5059

Imprinting reversible deformations on a compressed soft rod network

H. Jain and S. Ghosh, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 5053 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00099D

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