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Graphene-based Origami and Kirigami Metamaterials

Jan 27, 2026

Thermalized elastic membranes without distant self-avoidance are believed to undergo a crumpling transition when the microscopic bending stiffness is comparable to kT, the scale of thermal fluctuations. Most potential physical realizations of such membranes have a bending stiffness well in excess ofexperimentally achievable temperatures and are therefore unlikely ever to access the crumpling regime. This team proposed a mechanism to tune the onset of the crumpling transition by altering the geometry and topology of the sheet itself. They carried out extensive molecular dynamics simulations of perforated sheets with a dense periodic array of holes and observed that the critical temperature is controlled by the total fraction of removed area, independent of the precise arrangement and size of the individual holes. The critical exponents for the perforated membrane are compatible with those of the standard crumpling transition.

Authors

Mark Bowick (Syracuse U.) David Nelson (Harvard U.)

Additional Materials

U.S. National Science Foundation and NSF DMREF, Materials for Our Future

This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation Award No. 2015237. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. National Science Foundation. This site is maintained collaboratively by principal investigators with NSF DMREF awards, independent of the NSF.