Abstract
Molecular ferroelectrics combine electromechanical coupling and electric polarizabilities, offering immense promise in stimuli-dependent metamaterials. Despite such promise, current physical realizations of mechanical metamaterials remain hindered by the lack of rapid-prototyping ferroelectric metamaterial structures. Here, we present a continuous rapid printing strategy for the volumetric deposition of water-soluble molecular ferroelectric metamaterials with precise spatial control in virtually any three-dimensional (3D) geometry by means of an electric-field–assisted additive manufacturing. We demonstrate a scaffold-supported ferroelectric crystalline lattice that enables self-healing and a reprogrammable stiffness for dynamic tuning of mechanical metamaterials with a long lifetime and sustainability. A molecular ferroelectric architecture with resonant inclusions then exhibits adaptive mitigation of incident vibroacoustic dynamic loads via an electrically tunable subwavelength-frequency band gap. The findings shown here pave the way for the versatile additive manufacturing of molecular ferroelectric metamaterials.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 27204-27210 |
| Number of pages | 7 |
| Journal | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |
| Volume | 117 |
| Issue number | 44 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Nov 3 2020 |
Keywords
- Additive manufacturing
- Hydrogel
- Mechanical metamaterials
- Molecular ferroelectrics
- Three-dimensional printing
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