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Publications

Capillary Origami with Atomically Thin Membranes

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M.F. Reynolds
K.L. McGill
M.A. Wang
H. Gao
F. Mujid
K. Kang
J. Park
M.Z. Miskin
Itai Cohen
P.L. McEuen
Abstract

Small-scale optical and mechanical components and machines require control over three-dimensional structure at the microscale. Inspired by the analogy between paper and two-dimensional materials, origami-style folding of atomically thin materials offers a promising approach for making microscale structures from the thinnest possible sheets. In this Letter, we show that a monolayer of molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) can be folded into three-dimensional shapes by a technique called capillary origami, in which the surface tension of a droplet drives the folding of a thin sheet.

Journal
Nano Letters
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1719875
DMR-1539918
NSF DMR-1420709
1719875
NNCI-1542081
FA9550-16-1-0031
DGE-1746045
DMR-1757420
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group
Paul McEuen Group

Understanding the Stiff-to-Compliant Transition of the Meniscal Attachments by Spatial Correlation of Composition, Structure, and Mechanics

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
A.J. Boys
J.A.M.R. Kunitake
C.R. Henak
Itai Cohen
L.A. Estroff
L.J. Bonassar
Abstract

Recently, the scientific community has shown considerable interest in engineering tissues with organized compositional and structural gradients to mimic hard-to-soft tissue interfaces. This effort is hindered by an incomplete understanding of the construction of native tissue interfaces. In this work, we combined Raman microscopy and confocal elastography to map compositional, structural, and mechanical features across the stiff-to-compliant interface of the attachments of the meniscus in the knee.

Journal
ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Date Published
Funding Source
1536463
NSF 1807602
F31AR070009
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Atomic Layer Deposition for Membranes, Metamaterials, and Mechanisms

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
K.J. Dorsey
T.G. Pearson
E. Esposito
S. Russell
B. Bircan
Y. Han
M.Z. Miskin
D.A. Muller
Itai Cohen
P.L. McEuen
Abstract

Bending and folding techniques such as origami and kirigami enable the scale-invariant design of 3D structures, metamaterials, and robots from 2D starting materials. These design principles are especially valuable for small systems because most micro- and nanofabrication involves lithographic patterning of planar materials. Ultrathin films of inorganic materials serve as an ideal substrate for the fabrication of flexible microsystems because they possess high intrinsic strength, are not susceptible to plasticity, and are easily integrated into microfabrication processes.

Journal
Advanced Materials
Date Published
Funding Source
FA2386-13-1-4118
NNCI-1542081
DMR-1719875
1719875
DMR-1429155
W911NF-18-1-0032
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group
Paul McEuen Group

Audio cues enhance mirroring of arm motion when visual cues are scarce

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
E.D. Lee
E. Esposito
Itai Cohen
Abstract

Swing in a crew boat, a good jazz riff, a fluid conversation: these tasks require extracting sensory information about how others flow in order to mimic and respond. To determine what factors influence coordination, we build an environment to manipulate incoming sensory information by combining virtual reality and motion capture. We study how people mirror the motion of a human avatar’s arm as we occlude the avatar. We efficiently map the transition from successful mirroring to failure using Gaussian process regression.

Journal
Journal of the Royal Society Interface
Date Published
Funding Source
69189-NS-II
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Automated home cage training of mice in a hold-still center-out reach task

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
T. Bollu
S.C. Whitehead
N. Prasad
J. Walker
N. Shyamkumar
R. Subramaniam
B. Kardon
Itai Cohen
J.H. Goldberg
Abstract

An obstacle to understanding neural mechanisms of movement is the complex, distributed nature of the mammalian motor system. Here we present a novel behavioral paradigm for high-throughput dissection of neural circuits underlying mouse forelimb control. Custom touch-sensing joysticks were used to quantify mouse forelimb trajectories with micron-millisecond spatiotemporal resolution. Joysticks were integrated into computer-controlled, rack-mountable home cages, enabling batches of mice to be trained in parallel.

Journal
Journal of Neurophysiology
Date Published
Funding Source
DP2HD087952
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Kirigami Mechanics as Stress Relief by Elastic Charges

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M. Moshe
E. Esposito
S. Shankar
B. Bircan
Itai Cohen
D.R. Nelson
M.J. Bowick
Abstract

We develop a geometric approach to understand the mechanics of perforated thin elastic sheets, using the method of strain-dependent image elastic charges. This technique recognizes the buckling response of a hole under an external load as a geometrically tuned mechanism of stress relief. We use a diagonally pulled square paper frame as a model system to quantitatively test and validate our approach. Specifically, we compare nonlinear force-extension curves and global displacement fields in theory and experiment.

Journal
Physical Review Letters
Date Published
Funding Source
PHY-1125915
DMREF-1435999
PHY-1748958
1125915
1420570
1435794
1435829
1435999
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Nonlinear mechanics of thin frames

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M. Moshe
E. Esposito
S. Shankar
B. Bircan
Itai Cohen
D.R. Nelson
M.J. Bowick
Abstract

The dramatic effect kirigami, such as hole cutting, has on the elastic properties of thin sheets invites a study of the mechanics of thin elastic frames under an external load. Such frames can be thought of as modular elements needed to build any kirigami pattern. Here we develop the technique of elastic charges to address a variety of elastic problems involving thin sheets with perforations, focusing on frames with sharp corners. We find that holes generate elastic defects (partial disclinations), which act as sources of geometric incompatibility.

Journal
Physical Review E
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1435829
DMREF-1435794
DMREF-1435999
PHY-1748958
1125915
1420570
1435794
1435999
DMR-1420570
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Fiber embroidery of self-sensing soft actuators

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
S. Ceron
Itai Cohen
R.F. Shepherd
J.H. Pikul
C. Harnett
Abstract

Natural organisms use a combination of contracting muscles and inextensible fibers to transform into controllable shapes, camouflage into their surrounding environment, and catch prey. Replicating these capabilities with engineered materials is challenging because of the difficulty inmanufacturing and controlling soft material actuators with embedded fibers.

Journal
Biomimetics
Date Published
Funding Source
FA9550-18-1-0243
KSEF-3503- RDE-019
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Density-functional fluctuation theory of crowds

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
J.F. Méndez-Valderrama
Y.A. Kinkhabwala
J. Silver
Itai Cohen
Tomas Arias
Abstract

A primary goal of collective population behavior studies is to determine the rules governing crowd distributions in order to predict future behaviors in new environments. Current top-down modeling approaches describe, instead of predict, specific emergent behaviors, whereas bottom-up approaches must postulate, instead of directly determine, rules for individual behaviors. Here, we employ classical density functional theory (DFT) to quantify, directly from observations of local crowd density, the rules that predict mass behaviors under new circumstances.

Journal
Nature Communications
Date Published
Funding Source
W911NF-16-1-0433
DGE-1650441
D71TW010433
Army-ARO W911NF-16-1-0433
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group
Tomas Arias Group

Topological kinematics of origami metamaterials

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
B. Liu
J.L. Silverberg
A.A. Evans
C.D. Santangelo
R.J. Lang
T.C. Hull
Itai Cohen
Abstract

A variety of electronic phases in solid-state systems can be understood by abstracting away microscopic details and refocusing on how Fermi surface topology interacts with band structure to define available electron states 1 . In fact, topological concepts are broadly applicable to non-electronic materials and can be used to understand a variety of seemingly unrelated phenomena 2–6 . Here, we apply topological principles to origami-inspired mechanical metamaterials 7–12 , and demonstrate how to guide bulk kinematics by tailoring the crease configuration-space topology.

Journal
Nature Physics
Date Published
Funding Source
1706511
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group