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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 124(19): 198003, 2020 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32469550

ABSTRACT

Dynamic buckling may occur when a load is rapidly applied to, or removed from, an elastic object at rest. In contrast to its static counterpart, dynamic buckling offers a wide range of accessible patterns depending on the parameters of the system and the dynamics of the load. To study these effects, we consider experimentally the dynamics of an elastic ring in a soap film when part of the film is suddenly removed. The resulting change in tension applied to the ring creates a range of interesting patterns that cannot be easily accessed in static experiments. Depending on the aspect ratio of the ring's cross section, high-mode buckling patterns are found in the plane of the remaining soap film or out of the plane. Paradoxically, while inertia is required to observe these nontrivial modes, the selected pattern does not depend on inertia itself. The evolution of this pattern beyond the initial instability is studied experimentally and explained through theoretical arguments linking dynamics to pattern selection and mode growth. We also explore the influence of dynamic loading and show numerically that, by imposing a rate of loading that competes with the growth rate of instability, the observed pattern can be selected and controlled.

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(42): 20875-20880, 2019 10 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31570627

ABSTRACT

The wrinkling of thin elastic objects provides a means of generating regular patterning at small scales in applications ranging from photovoltaics to microfluidic devices. Static wrinkle patterns are known to be governed by an energetic balance between the object's bending stiffness and an effective substrate stiffness, which may originate from a true substrate stiffness or from tension and curvature along the wrinkles. Here, we investigate dynamic wrinkling induced by the impact of a solid sphere onto an ultrathin polymer sheet floating on water. The vertical deflection of the sheet's center induced by impact draws material radially inward, resulting in an azimuthal compression that is relieved by the wrinkling of the entire sheet. We show that this wrinkling is truly dynamic, exhibiting features that are qualitatively different to those seen in quasistatic wrinkling experiments. Moreover, we show that the wrinkles coarsen dynamically because of the inhibiting effect of the fluid inertia. This dynamic coarsening can be understood heuristically as the result of a dynamic stiffness, which dominates the static stiffnesses reported thus far, and allows control of wrinkle wavelength.

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