The art of origami usually requires dextrous fingers to turn a flat sheet into an intricate 3D shape. Now it鈥檚 got considerably easier, thanks to a material that can fold up on its own.
A team led by of Harvard University and and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology made a square sheet of glass fibre 4 centimetres wide and patterned with 32 triangular tiles. The seams between triangles are made from flexible silicon rubber and a 鈥渟hape memory鈥 alloy foil.
Each foil was given a memory by folding it in two and holding it in a vice as it is heated to 420聽掳C for 30聽minutes. When unfolded and then allowed to cool, the foils retained a memory of the fold. They would re-adopt the shape when heated above a 鈥渢ransition鈥 temperature of 70聽掳C.
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The researchers used origami simulator software to work out the sequence of folds required to create two simple structures 鈥 a paper aeroplane and a boat. They then sent a current through the foils, heating them above their transition temperature and so causing them to fold again. By controlling precisely when a current was applied to each foil, they ensured that the flat sheet folded into its pre-designed shape inside 20 seconds (see video).
Although the team has so far managed to create only simple origami shapes, they say the technique could make tailor-made objects if the size of the triangles is reduced and their number increased. 鈥淚magine foregoing all the tools in your toolbox and instead using a stack of self-folding sheets to produce the tools and structures you need for a particular job,鈥 says Wood.
Journal reference: , DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0914069107