Elasticity, Geometry and Buckling
Andrej Košmrlj, Princeton
Abstract:
In this talk I present how geometrical shape affects
the mechanical properties of thin solid shells and how
buckling instabilities change the geometry of periodic
microstructures in materials. Using methods rooted in
statistical mechanics, we find that random shape
fluctuations and thermal excitations of thin solid sheets
significantly modify their mechanical properties. Sheets
subject to such fluctuations are much harder to bend, but
easier to stretch, compress and shear. In spherical
shells, thermal fluctuations also effectively produce
compressive stress, which is equivalent to applying external
pressure. We find that small spherical shells are stable, but
for sufficiently large shells this thermally
generated “pressure" becomes big enough to crush spherical
shells. Finally, I show how methods from solid state physics
can help us deduce the geometry of buckled periodic
microstructures. Buckling instabilities can change
the microstructure symmetries, including a spontaneous chiral
symmetry breaking, which drastically modifies the
material properties.