Cherryl Hunt’s research while affiliated with University of Exeter and other places

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Publications (1)


The one-way hinge in the hind wing of the beetle is 10 times stiffer in one direction that the other.
An insect-inspired asymmetric hinge in a double-layer membrane
  • Article

November 2022

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189 Reads

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7 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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Insect wings are deformable airfoils, in which deformations are mostly achieved by complicated interactions between their structural components. Due to the complexity of the wing design and technical challenges associated with testing the delicate wings, we know little about the properties of their components and how they determine wing response to flight forces. Here, we report an unusual structure from the hind-wing membrane of the beetle Pachnoda marginata. The structure, a transverse section of the claval flexion line, consists of two distinguishable layers: a bell-shaped upper layer and a straight lower layer. Our computational simulations showed that this is an effective one-way hinge, which is stiff in tension and upward bending but flexible in compression and downward bending. By systematically varying its design parameters in a computational model, we showed that the properties of the double-layer membrane hinge can be tuned over a wide range. This enabled us to develop a broad design space, which we later used for model selection. We used selected models in three distinct applications, which proved that the double-layer hinge represents a simple yet effective design strategy for controlling the mechanical response of structures using a single material and with no extra mass. The insect-inspired, one-way hinge is particularly useful for developing structures with asymmetric behavior, exhibiting different responses to the same load in two opposite directions. This multidisciplinary study not only advances our understanding of the biomechanics of complicated insect wings but also informs the design of easily tunable engineering hinges.

Citations (1)


... Structures with asymmetric properties produce different responses when subjected to the same load in different directions. For the bistable mechanism, the asymmetric properties can cause the mechanism to tend to deform in one direction and suffer great resistance when deforming in the other direction, which can be applied in asymmetric double-membrane one-way hinges inspired by insects [57] and bionic grippers that produce a soft force buffer near the limit of their working range [58]. ...

Reference:

Fast Response Gripper Based on Asymmetric Bistable Dual-Triangle Tensegrity Structure
An insect-inspired asymmetric hinge in a double-layer membrane
  • Citing Article
  • November 2022

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences