Artificial sunflower: Light-induced deformation of photoactive shells
Abstract
Photomechanically active materials undergo reversible deformation on illumination, making them ideal for remote, tether-free actuation. Much of the work on these materials has focused on one-dimensional structures, such as strips. In this paper, we explore photomechanically active two-dimensional structures such as sheets and shells. When illuminated, such structures undergo spontaneous bending due to the limited penetration of light. However, the geometry of the shell constrains possible deformation modes: changes in Gauss curvature lead to in-plane stretching, against which shells are very stiff. Therefore, there is a complex coupling between the photomechanical actuation and the mechanical behavior of a shell. We develop and implement a novel approach to study photomechananically active shells. This method is a discrete shell model which captures the interplay between actuation, stretching, bending, and geometric changes. Through a series of examples, we explore these complex interactions, demonstrating how one can design shells that deform to follow the source of illumination.
Copyright and License
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
Acknowledgement
We gratefully acknowledge [42] which we used for the meshing and calculation of first and second fundamental forms. This work has been funded by the US Office of Naval Research (MURI grant N00014-18-1-2624).
Contributions
Sathvik Sanagala: Writing – review & editing, Writing – original draft, Visualization, Validation, Software, Methodology, Formal analysis, Data curation, Conceptualization. Kaushik Bhattacharya: Writing – review & editing, Writing – original draft, Visualization, Validation, Project administration, Methodology, Funding acquisition, Formal analysis, Conceptualization.
Additional details
- Office of Naval Research
- Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) N00014-18-1-2624
- Accepted
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2025-02-10Accepted
- Available
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2025-02-27Published online
- Available
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2025-03-07Version of record
- Caltech groups
- Division of Engineering and Applied Science (EAS)
- Publication Status
- Published