MEAM Seminar: “Confined Curved Shells and their Elaborate Conformations”
January 14, 2020 at 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
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Curved shells, when confined, can deform to a broad assortment of large scale shapes and smaller scale wrinkling and folding patterns quite unlike what produced by their flat counterparts. The intrinsic, natural curvature of shells is the central element that allows for this rich and very interesting morphological landscape, but it is also the source of geometric nonlinearities that renders an analytic treatment of nonâEuclidean shells, even under small load, very difficult. In this talk we examine some snapshots of this morphological landscape. Inspired by the natural folding and unfolding of polled grains, we use theory, simulations and experiments to explore the large scale deformation of a confined thin spherical shell with an opening. We then proceed to investigate the surface topography of shallow doubly curved shells resting on a fluid substrate. The frustration due to the competing geometry of the flat substrate and the curved shell produces a wealth of highly reproducible and ordered, or random and disordered patterns. From these examples, we see Gaussian curvature emerging as a powerful tool that can generate complex patterns.

