The Borneo Post

US scientists build methanol-powered beetle bot

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WASHINGTON: Scientists have long envisioned building tiny robots capable of navigating environmen­ts that are inaccessib­le or too dangerous for humans — but finding ways to keep them powered and moving has been impossible to achieve.

A team at the University of Southern California has now made a breakthrou­gh, building an 88-milligramm­e ‘RoBeetle’ that runs on methanol and uses an artificial muscle system to crawl, climb and carry loads on its back for up to two hours.

It is just 15 millimetre­s in length, making it “one of the lightest and smallest autonomous robots ever created,” its inventor Xiufeng Yang told AFP.

“We wanted to create a robot that has a weight and size comparable to real insects,” added Yang, who was lead author of a paper describing the work in Science Robotics on Wednesday.

The problem is that most robots need motors that are themselves bulky and require electricit­y, which in turn makes ba eries necessary.

The smallest ba eries available weigh 10-20 times more than a tiger beetle, a 50 milligramm­e insect the team used as their reference point.To overcome this, Yang and his colleagues engineered an artificial muscle system based on liquid fuel — in this case methanol, which stores about 10 times more energy than a ba ery of the same mass.

The ‘ muscles’ are made from nickel-titanium alloy wires — also known as Nitinol — which contracts in length when heated, unlike most metals that expand.

The wire was coated in a platinum powder that acts as a catalyst for the combustion of methanol vapor.

As the vapor from RoBeetle’s fuel tank burns on the platinum powder, the wire contracts, and an array of microvalve­s shut to stop more combustion.

The wire then cools and expands, which once more opens the valves, and the process repeats itself until all the fuel is spent.

The expanding and contractin­g artificial muscles are connected to the RoBeetles’ front legs through a transmissi­on mechanism, which allows it to crawl.

The team tested their robot on a variety of flat and inclined surfaces made from materials that were both smooth, like glass, and rough, like ma ress pads.

RoBeetle could carry a load of up to 2.6 times its own weight on its back and run for two hours on a full tank, said Yang.

By contrast, ‘the smallest ba ery-powered crawling robot weighs one gram and operates about 12 minutes’.

In the future, microbots may be used for a variety of applicatio­ns like infrastruc­ture inspection or search-and-rescue missions a er natural disasters.

They might also assist in tasks like artificial pollinatio­n or environmen­tal monitoring.

Roboticist­s Ryan Truby and Shuguang Li, of MIT and Harvard respective­ly, wrote in an accompanyi­ng commentary that RoBeetle was ‘an exciting microrobot­ics milestone’, but added there were also opportunit­ies for improvemen­t.

For example, the robot is limited to continuous forward motion, and taking electronic­s out of the equation reduces its capacity to carry out sophistica­ted tasks.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? The robotic beetle.
— AFP photo The robotic beetle.

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