Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/125754
Title: Handles with reentrant cells for use as oar handles : design considerations, physical characteristics, and end-users’ perceptions
Authors: Grima-Cornish, James N.
Attard, Daphne
Gatt, Alfred
Ficarra, Giovanni
Cerasola, Dario
Saliba Thorne, Claire
Albanozzo, Andrew
Albanozzo, Paul
Gatt, Ruben
Formosa, Cynthia
Grima, Joseph N.
Keywords: Rowing -- Equipment and supplies
Handles -- Design and construction
Sports equipment -- Design and construction
Auxetics (Materials) -- Mechanical properties
Hand strength -- Physiology
Issue Date: 2024
Publisher: Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA
Citation: Grima‐Cornish, J. N., Attard, D., Gatt, A., Ficarra, G., Cerasola, D., Saliba Thorne, C.,...Grima, J. N. (2024). Handles with Reentrant Cells for Use as Oar Handles: Design Considerations, Physical Characteristics, and End‐Users’ Perceptions. Physica Status Solidi. B, 2400300.
Abstract: Rowing is a sport that requires athletes to perform the action of pulling and rotating an oar by hand, applying forces of considerable magnitude. Herein, inspired by the notion that auxetic materials and metamaterials behave differently compared to their conventional counterparts, it is examined how a handle prototype, specifically designed to incorporate the classic re-entrant motif, behaves and how end-users perceive it. Physical experiments conducted on such prototype, which measured the contact pressures, suggest that on average, higher pressures are measured when pulling with this reentrant grip compared to its non reentrant counterpart, indicating that this re-entrant prototype should feel firmer. More importantly, respondents of a survey are asked to give their feedback, and different views on which handle they would prefer to use are provided. The ones who preferred the prototype with the reentrant features report that they preferred it because it felt firmer and allowed for a better grip. This suggests that there is potential for further investigation into whether handles, oar handles in particular, made from auxetic components, re-entrant cells, or other motifs which are well known for their negative Poisson’s ratio characteristics, could provide a better and more secure grip and be used in sports applications.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/125754
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacHScPod



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