CEE Distinguished Seminar Series Spring 2024 ”Origami Engineering” CANCELED- Postponed until Fall 2024

Interdisciplinary Sci & Eng Building (ISEB) – 1010
Glaucio H. Paulino, Ph.D.

Margareta Engman Augustine Professor of Engineering at Princeton University 
Host: Professor Lizhi Sun

Reception Immediately Following in ISEB 1st Floor Lobby (prefunction)

Abstract: We study the geometric mechanics of origami assemblages and investigate how geometry affects behavior and properties. Understanding origami from a structural standpoint allows for conceptualizing and designing feasible applications across scales and disciplines. We review the basic mathematical rules of origami and use 3D-printed origami legos to illustrate those concepts. We then present a reduced-order-model, which consists of an improved bar-and-hinge model, to understand the nonlinear mechanics of non-rigid origami. We explore the stiffness of tubular origami and kirigami structures based on the Miura-ori folding pattern. We couple compatible origami tubes into a variety of cellular assemblages that enhances mechanical characteristics and geometric versatility, leading to the design of structures and configurational metamaterials that can be deployed, stiffened and tuned. We have designed, fabricated (using DLW, direct laser writing) and tested (in-situ SEM) this metamaterial at the micron-scale. This resulted not only in the smallest scale origami assembly, but also in a metamaterial with intriguing mechanical properties, such as anisotropy, reversible auxeticity and large degree of shape recoverability. The presentation concludes with a vision toward the field of origami engineering. 

Bio: Glaucio Paulino is the Margareta E. Augustine Professor of Engineering at Princeton University. His seminal contributions in the area of computational mechanics include the development of methodologies to characterize the deformation and fracture behavior of existing and emerging materials; topology optimization for large-scale multiscale/multiphysics problems; variational methods; deployable and adaptable structures; and origami engineering. He is a fellow of ASME, EMI, AAM, USACM and IACM and SES. Recently, he received the Daniel C. Drucker Medal of ASME (2020), the Raymond D. Mindlin Medal of ASCE (2020), the Reddy Medal from Mechanics of Advanced Materials and Structures (MAMS 2020) and the Eringen Medal from SES (2023). He also received the 2015 Cozzarelli Prize from the National Academy of Sciences, “which recognizes recently published PNAS papers of outstanding scientific excellence and originality.” He is a member of the US National Academy of Engineering (NAE) and a former president of SES.