Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27543-7
Title: Robustly printable freeform thermal metamaterials
Authors: Sha, Wei
Xiao, Mi
Zhang, Jinhao
Ren, Xuecheng
Zhu, Zhan
Zhang, Yan
Xu, Guoqiang 
Li, Huagen
Liu, Xiliang
Chen, Xia
Gao, Liang
Qiu, Cheng-Wei 
Hu, Run
Issue Date: 1-Dec-2021
Publisher: Nature Research
Citation: Sha, Wei, Xiao, Mi, Zhang, Jinhao, Ren, Xuecheng, Zhu, Zhan, Zhang, Yan, Xu, Guoqiang, Li, Huagen, Liu, Xiliang, Chen, Xia, Gao, Liang, Qiu, Cheng-Wei, Hu, Run (2021-12-01). Robustly printable freeform thermal metamaterials. Nature Communications 12 (1) : 7228. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27543-7
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Thermal metamaterials have exhibited great potential on manipulating, controlling and processing the flow of heat, and enabled many promising thermal metadevices, including thermal concentrator, rotator, cloak, etc. However, three long-standing challenges remain formidable, i.e., transformation optics-induced anisotropic material parameters, the limited shape adaptability of experimental thermal metadevices, and a priori knowledge of background temperatures and thermal functionalities. Here, we present robustly printable freeform thermal metamaterials to address these long-standing difficulties. This recipe, taking the local thermal conductivity tensors as the input, resorts to topology optimization for the freeform designs of topological functional cells (TFCs), and then directly assembles and prints them. Three freeform thermal metadevices (concentrator, rotator, and cloak) are specifically designed and 3D-printed, and their omnidirectional concentrating, rotating, and cloaking functionalities are demonstrated both numerically and experimentally. Our study paves a powerful and flexible design paradigm toward advanced thermal metamaterials with complex shapes, omnidirectional functionality, background temperature independence, and fast-prototyping capability. © 2021, The Author(s).
Source Title: Nature Communications
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/231887
ISSN: 2041-1723
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-27543-7
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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