Moving origami techniques forward for self-folding 3-D structures

(Nanowerk News) Though the past 15 years have seen an exciting run of creative scientific advances in fabricating three-dimensional (3D) structures by self-folding of 2D sheets, the complexity of structures achieved to date falls far short of what can easily be folded by hand using paper, says polymer scientist Ryan Hayward at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
While the Japanese art of origami has been "a rich source of inspiration" for scientists working to construct such 3D forms, the limitation to simple shapes has held up development of new applications in areas such as biomimetic systems, soft robotics and mechanical meta-materials, especially for structures on small length scales where traditional manufacturing processes fail. Now, however, a team led by Hayward has developed an approach that could open the door to a new wave of discoveries.
He and Junhee Na, Arthur Evans and Christian Santangelo at UMass Amherst, with several other collaborators, have found a way to make reversibly self-folding origami structures on small length scales using ultraviolet photolithographic patterning of photo-crosslinkable polymers. Details appear in the current issue of Advanced Materials ("Programming Reversibly Self-Folding Origami with Micropatterned Photo-Crosslinkable Polymer Trilayers").
Origami for Self-Folding 3D Structures
These are three-dimensional reconstructions (from confocal fluorescence microscopy) of self-folded origami structures with overall dimensions slightly below 1 mm. At left is a bird based on the design "New Flapping Bird" by Randlett, and at right an octahedron-tetrahedron ('octet') truss design independently discovered by many origamists including Huffman, Kawasaki and Resch.
Hayward says, "We have designed and implemented a simple approach that consists of sandwiching a thin layer of a temperature-responsive hydrogel with two patterned films of a rigid plastic. The presence of gaps in the plastic layers allows for folding by a controlled amount in a specified direction, enabling the formation of fairly complex origami structures."
The UMass Amherst team uses a maskless lithographic technique based on a digital micromirror array device to spatially pattern the crosslinking of the polymer films, and then dissolves away the uncross-linked regions with a solvent. By directly patterning the polymer films, rather than using a traditional photolithographic approach based on a photoresist layer, it is possible to pattern multiple layers of polymers with widely contrasting material properties using relatively few processing steps, he explains.
In biomedicine or bioengineering, this new approach may help in developing advanced self-deploying implantable medical devices, or in guiding the growth of cells into complex tissues and organs.
The authors feel their data "suggest a clear pathway for future improvements" in the minimum achievable size and maximum achievable complexity of self-folded structures, "simply by using thinner films to enable tighter curvatures, along with improved lithographic methods to allow for patterning of smaller folds."
Instead of following the step-by-step actuation of folds in a controlled sequence characteristic of traditional origami, the new method relies on "collapse" designs, in which all folds are accomplished more or less simultaneously.
"Collapse-type origami designs have not been thoroughly explored in the past because of the difficulty of actuating tens or hundreds of folds with human hands; our technique removes this restriction and we expect that with the actuation scalability provided by our technique, vastly more complex collapsible structures may now be readily explored."
They expect that the new platform they designed will be useful "for future studies addressing fundamental questions about the mechanics of self-folded structures, as well as for applications in microrobotics, biomedical devices and mechanical metamaterials."
Source: University of Massachusetts at Amherst