Flexure


A flexure is a flexible element engineered to be compliant in specific degrees of freedom. Flexures are a design feature utilized by design engineers for providing adjustment or compliance in a design.

Flexure types

Most compound flexure designs are composed of 3 fundamental types of flexure:
Pin FlexureBlade FlexureNotch Flexure

Since single flexure features are limited both in travel capability and degrees of freedom available, compound flexure systems are designed using combinations of these component features. Using compound flexures, complex motion profiles with specific degrees of freedom and relatively long travel distances are possible.

Design aspects

In the field of precision engineering, flexures have several key advantages. High precision alignment tasks might not be possible when friction or stiction are present. Additionally, conventional bearings or linear slides often exhibit positioning hysteresis due to backlash and friction. Flexures are able to achieve much lower resolution limits, because they depend on bending and/or torsion of flexible elements, rather than surface interaction of many parts. This makes flexures a critical design feature used in optical instrumentation such as interferometers.
Due to their mode of action, flexures are used for limited range motions and cannot replace long-travel or continuous-rotation adjustments. Additionally, special care must be taken to design the flexure to avoid material yielding or fatigue, both of which are potential failure modes in a flexure design.
.

Design examples