Researchers Explain Mechanism Behind Bendy Straws
Washington D.C. While bendable drinking straws, medical tubes, and collapsible dog bowls all work on a common principle, the fundamental mechanisms of how they work have, until now, not been explored properly.
Washington D.C. [USA], Oct 21 (ANI): While bendable drinking straws, medical tubes, and collapsible dog bowls all work on a common principle, the fundamental mechanisms of how they work have, until now, not been explored properly.
A team of researchers reported that they have figured out how these "multi-stable" structures composed of stacked conical sections are loaded with pre-stress, pent-up tension that arises "because the material is forced into a closed ring that is more tightly curved than it naturally wants to be," Ryan Hayward, the lead researcher of the study, said.
"What we discovered is that the very useful property of being mechanically stable in a bent configuration seems to require pre-stress. As far as we are aware, no one had ever looked at how and why such structures have stability in the bent state," he added.
The researcher further said, " It will be helpful for us to understand this fundamental principle, which is key when designing new applications. If you're going to build a reconfigurable device, it's important to know why it works, and when it might fail."
Hayward said that the mechanics that explain the ability of corrugated tubes to be extended and contracted in length are "pretty well established," as is the idea that moving materials between mechanically stable states require overcoming an energy barrier. Playing with a variety of colorful bendable tubes on his desk, he demonstrates that the tube holds its shape in either state and that an energy barrier is crossed when it pops in and out of each.
"The mystery is why this tube of stacked cones should be stable in the bent state," he noted. "There's no obvious reason why a bendy straw should want to be stable when bent," he added. The study is published in the journal of Soft Matter.
To experiment with this, he and colleagues cut a tube lengthwise to see what would happen. By cutting the tube, he said, "we figured out that the tube would open out and flatten, which was a serendipitous moment. It was something we had to go back and try to understand. That was the key to discovering the role of pre-stress. We found that when you relax the curvature, the lack of stored energy eliminates stability in the bent state. We also built some tubes that we forced closed at a smaller radius, to introduce pre-stress, and found that this restored the ability to hold a bent shape."
They analyzed this "pre-stress" effect through curvature analysis during deformation using X-ray computed tomography and with a simple mechanical model that captured the qualitative behaviour of the highly reconfigurable systems.
The authors pointed out, "Many biological mechanisms have been uncovered that exploit snap-through transitions between mechanically stable states of slender elastic structures to achieve rapid motion. While much of the literature has focused on bistability, systems that support multiple stable states are attractive for the design of highly reconfigurable structures," such as the ones they report on. (ANI)
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