Ring Origami: Snap‐Folding of Rings with Different Geometries

Abstract

Origami folding and thin structure buckling are intensively studied for structural transformations with large packing ratio for various biomedical, robotic, and aerospace applications. The folding of circular rings has shown bistable snap‐through deformation under simple twisting motion and demonstrates a large area change to 11% of its undeformed configuration. Motivated by the large area change and the self‐guided deformation through snap‐folding, it is intended to design ring origami assemblies with unprecedented packing ratios. Herein, through finite‐element analysis, snap‐folding behaviors of single ring with different geometries (circular, elliptical, rounded rectangular, and rounded triangular shapes) are studied for ring origami assemblies for functional foldable structures. Geometric parameters' effects on the foldability, stability, and the packing ratio are investigated and are validated experimentally. With different rings as basic building blocks, the folding of ring origami assemblies including linear‐patterned rounded rectangular rings, radial‐patterned elliptical rings, and 3D crossing circular rings is further experimentally demonstrated, which show significant packing ratios of 7% and 2.5% of the initial areas, and 0.3% of the initial volume, respectively. It is envisioned that the reported snap‐folding of origami rings will provide alternative strategies to design foldable/deployable structures and devices with reliable self‐guided deformation and large area change.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jul 31, 2021
Source ID
10.1002/aisy.202100107

Entities

People

  • Cole Zemelka
  • H. Jerry Qi
  • Liang Yue
  • Ruike Zhao
  • Shuai Wu
  • Xiaohao Sun
  • Yi Jin

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  • Georgia Tech
  • National Science Foundation
  • Ohio State University

Tags

Readers

  • Electrical Engineering
  • Marine Mammal Biology
  • Mechanical Engineering/Mechanics of Materials.

Technology Areas

  • AI & ML
  • Autonomy
  • Biotechnology
  • Space
  • Space - Hall-Effect Thruster