Experiment-informed finite-strain inverse design of spinodal metamaterials

Journal Article (2025)
Author(s)

P. Thakolkaran (TU Delft - Team Sid Kumar)

Michael Espinal (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Somayajulu Dhulipala (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Siddhant Kumar (TU Delft - Team Sid Kumar)

Carlos M. Portela (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Research Group
Team Sid Kumar
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eml.2024.102274
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Research Group
Team Sid Kumar
Volume number
74
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Abstract

Spinodal metamaterials, with architectures inspired by natural phase-separation processes, have presented a significant alternative to periodic and symmetric morphologies when designing mechanical metamaterials with extreme performance. While their elastic mechanical properties have been systematically determined, their large-deformation, nonlinear responses have been challenging to predict and design, in part due to limited data sets and the need for complex nonlinear simulations. This work presents a novel physics-enhanced machine learning (ML) and optimization framework tailored to address the challenges of designing intricate spinodal metamaterials with customized mechanical properties in large-deformation scenarios where computational modeling is restrictive and experimental data is sparse. By utilizing large-deformation experimental data directly, this approach facilitates the inverse design of spinodal structures with precise finite-strain mechanical responses. The framework sheds light on instability-induced pattern formation in spinodal metamaterials—observed experimentally and in selected nonlinear simulations—leveraging physics-based inductive biases in the form of nonconvex energetic potentials. Altogether, this combined ML, experimental, and computational effort provides a route for efficient and accurate design of complex spinodal metamaterials for large-deformation scenarios where energy absorption and prediction of nonlinear failure mechanisms is essential.