Putting the “S” into mechanics

Putting the “S” into mechanics

By Cambridge Philosophical Society

Overview

Professor Keith Seffen

Professor Keith Seffen

Putting the “S” into mechanics

The structural mechanics of shape-changing structures: from bending armadillos, self-deploying satellites, to roll-up displays.

Most structures, e.g. buildings & bridges, are designed to be near rigid when loaded: in view of high winds or heavy traffic, their movements are barely noticeable. Formally, they are stiff, strong and stable, in terms of their “structural mechanics” – the study of their loaded deformation. Large movements from material weakness, overloading, or bad design, typically portend failure & eventual collapse. Embracing large movements, i.e. deliberate changes in shape, can admit new behaviour if safe and reversible, to yield transformer-like technologies and simple explanations of biological morphology, for example. In this talk, I will describe several structural mechanics principles for making shape-changing structures, out of ordinary materials, complete with physical demonstrations.

Professor Keith Seffen is Professor of Engineering Mechanics and supervises topics in Structural- and Mechanical Engineering at Corpus Christi College.

Category: Science & Tech, Science

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Highlights

  • 1 hour
  • In person

Location

Bristol-Myers Squibb Lecture Theatre, Yusef Hamied Department of Chemistry, (entrance to lecture theatre, adjacent to the Scott Polar Research Institute)

29 Lensfield Road

Cambridge CB2 1ER United Kingdom

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Cambridge Philosophical Society

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Free
Nov 10 · 18:00 GMT