The delicate butterfly served as the inspiration for a new lightweight lattice structure that also boasts enhanced mechanical strength, impact resistance, and energy absorption capability through advanced structural design. A collaborative research team from Tohoku University and the Wuhan University of Technology developed this strong yet light-as-a-butterfly material with the hopes of one day using it for airplanes or earthquake-resistant infrastructure.
Inspired by the vein geometry of butterfly wings that evenly distribute stress, the researchers designed a butterfly-shaped body-centered cubic lattice architecture. Rather than relying on changes in the base material itself (which can be an intensive undertaking), the study demonstrates how structural topology can fundamentally determine stiffness, strength, deformation behavior, and failure resistance.
Mechanical testing and finite-element simulations revealed that the new structure significantly outperforms conventional lattice designs under both quasi-static compression and dynamic impact loading. In particular, the newly designed lattice exhibited markedly higher elastic modulus, plateau stress, and energy absorption performance. Under impact conditions, the structure effectively redistributed stress through an X-shaped deformation pathway (like a butterfly spreading its wings), suppressing localized collapse and delaying catastrophic failure.
"This structural mechanism is particularly remarkable, since most lightweight lattice materials aren't able to withstand forces like local buckling or shock," remarks Eric Jianfeng Chen of Tohoku University. "In contrast, our design shows a much greater resistance to sudden mechanical loading."
The findings provide a new design strategy for lightweight protective structures, impact-resistant metamaterials, and advanced mechanical components for potential transportation and aerospace applications. In Japan, where earthquake resilience is of major societal importance, such lightweight energy-absorbing structural concepts could be highly useful for future protective engineering systems.
The findings were published in the International Journal of Mechanical Sciences on January 27, 2026. This publication was made open access through support from Tohoku University's FY2025 Open Access Promotion Support Program.
About the World Premier International Research Center Initiative (WPI)
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Advanced Institute for Materials Research (AIMR)
Tohoku University
Establishing a World-Leading Research Center for Materials Science
AIMR aims to contribute to society through its actions as a world-leading research center for materials science and push the boundaries of research frontiers. To this end, the institute gathers excellent researchers in the fields of physics, chemistry, materials science, engineering, and mathematics and provides a world-class research environment.
AIMR site: https://www.wpi-aimr.tohoku.ac.jp/en/
International Journal of Mechanical Sciences
10.1016/j.ijmecsci.2026.111298
Anisotropic butterfly-inspired lattice structures for enhanced impact resistance
27-Jan-2026