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Caltech

Aerospace Colloquium

Friday, April 3, 2026
3:00pm to 4:00pm
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Guggenheim 133 (Lees-Kubota Lecture Hall)
When waves are important, what is the best constitutive law for impact mitigation and how can we realize it?
Nicholas Boechler, Associate Professor, Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering, University of California, San Diego,

Particularly for high-speed impacts, the propagation of mechanical waves, affected by the properties of the material through which they traverse, can play a major role in the resulting damage incurred. This raises the question, in such regimes, if one could choose any constitutive response for the impacted material, what is the best? For this talk, I will summarize our initial steps towards answering this question. Considering peak kinetic energy as a figure of merit, we use reduced-order models to study the interplay of: i) bistable elasticity, viscosity, and discreteness; ii) tailorable polynomial nonlinear elasticity; and iii) constitutive heterogeneity. The observed performance differences raise the further question: how can we realize materials with an identified optimal constitutive response? I will describe our initial steps to answer this latter question via the use of shape optimization of subwavelength structural motifs. The approaches described herein may find future use in impact problems considering different figures of merit, energetic regimes, and physical mechanisms, as well as different dynamical settings, unrelated to impact, potentially even outside solid mechanics.

For more information, please contact Scott Bollt by email at [email protected].