Science
Canadian-French Team Develops Precision Kirigami Parachute

Researchers from Canada and France have successfully developed a parachute inspired by the Japanese art of kirigami. This innovative design allows for precise delivery of payloads, such as water bottles, dropped from drones. The team conducted extensive testing in real-world outdoor conditions, showcasing the parachute’s ability to stabilize airflow and improve accuracy during descent.
Traditional parachutes often require a gliding angle to avoid turbulence, which can lead to significant drift from the target. This issue is particularly critical during operations like humanitarian aid delivery, where accuracy is essential. To address this challenge, the research team, led by David Méliançon at Polytechnique Montréal, utilized kirigami techniques to enhance the parachute’s performance.
By leveraging the shape-morphing capabilities of kirigami, which involves cutting and folding materials to create intricate 3D designs, the researchers crafted a parachute that can transform its shape as it falls. Méliançon explains, “We proposed to leverage kirigami’s shape morphing capability under fluid flow to design new kinds of ballistic parachutes.”
Innovative Design Inspired by Nature
The researchers drew inspiration from natural mechanisms used by wind-dispersed seeds. For example, dandelion seeds utilize feathery bristles to create a stabilized vortex, while sycamore seeds spin during descent. These designs provide passive control over where seeds land, a principle the team applied to their parachute.
The final design consists of a flat disc with circumferential slits, inspired by a kirigami motif called a closed loop. Instead of attaching the payload at the edge, the design allows for direct mounting at the center. When deployed, the parachute morphs into an inverted bell shape due to a combination of air resistance and the weight of the payload. This unique structure ensures orderly airflow through its numerous openings, minimizing turbulence and enhancing trajectory predictability.
Testing involved a series of simulations and wind tunnel experiments, culminating in outdoor trials where a water bottle was successfully delivered from a hovering drone at a height of 60 meters. The parachute’s performance was so precise that it landed directly on target.
Cost-Effective and Easy to Manufacture
The team explored multiple sizes and kirigami patterns, demonstrating that designs with lower load-to-area ratios can achieve terminal velocities comparable to traditional parachutes, while providing greater landing accuracy. Moreover, the simplicity of the kirigami-based design allows for easier manufacturing compared to conventional parachutes, which are often complex and costly.
Méliançon noted, “Little hand labour is necessary. We have made parachutes out of sheets of plastic, paper, or cardboard. We need a sheet of material with a certain rigidity, that’s all.” This affordability and ease of production could have far-reaching implications for diverse applications, particularly in drone delivery systems and emergency aid operations.
As the researchers look to the future, they hope their work will lead to advancements in package delivery methods and improve the efficiency of delivering essential supplies during crises. The findings of this innovative project are detailed in the journal Nature.
The development of this kirigami-inspired parachute marks a significant step forward in precision delivery technology, promising to enhance the effectiveness of drone operations in various fields.
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