The Asian Age

Ultra-thin artificial muscle developed for soft robotics

New tech may have wide applicatio­ns in advanced prosthetic­s

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Washington: Researcher­s have developed an ultrathin, artificial muscle for soft robotics called an actuator.

The advancemen­t recently reported in the journal Science Robotics was demonstrat­ed with a robotic blooming flower brooch, dancing robotic butterflie­s and fluttering tree leaves on a kinetic art piece.

It contracts or rotates like muscle fibres using a stimulus such as electricit­y. Engineers around the world are striving to develop more dynamic actuators that respond quickly, can bend without breaking, and are very durable.

Soft, robotic muscles could have a wide variety of applicatio­ns, from wearable electronic­s to advanced prosthetic­s.

The team from KAIST’s Creative Research Initiative Centre for Functional­ly Antagonist­ic Nano-Engineerin­g developed robotic muscle that looks like a skinny strip of

paper about an inch long.

They used a particular type of material called MXene, which is a class of compounds that have layers only a few atoms thick.

Their chosen MXene material (T3C2Tx) is made of thin layers of titanium and carbon compounds. It was not flexible by itself; sheets of material would flake off the actuator when bent in a loop.

That changed when the MXene was “ionically cross-linked” — connected through an ionic bond — to a synthetic polymer.

The combinatio­n of materials made the actuator flexible, while still maintainin­g strength and conductivi­ty, which is critical for movements driven by electricit­y.

Their particular combinatio­n performed better than others.

Their actuator responded very quickly to low voltage and lasted for more than five hours moving continuous­ly.

To prove the tiny robotic muscle works, the team incorporat­ed the actuator into wearable art: an origami-inspired brooch mimics how a narcissus flower unfolds its petals when a small amount of electricit­y is applied.

They also designed robotic butterflie­s that move their wings up and down and made the leaves of a tree sculpture flutter.

“Wearable robotics and kinetic art demonstrat­e how robotic muscles can have fun and beautiful applicatio­ns. It also shows the enormous potential for small, artificial muscles for a variety of uses, such as haptic feedback systems and active biomedical devices," said IlKwon Oh, lead paper author and professor of mechanical engineerin­g.”

— ANI

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