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Engineers closer to self-healing machines

- By Peter Holley

The idea of creating selfrepair­ing machines has been a popular fantasy (and nightmare) ever since the “Terminator” franchise mythologiz­ed the concept in the 1980s.

Innovators are still a long ways away from developing robots that can independen­tly repair themselves, but researcher­s at Carnegie Mellon University say they may be one step closer to creating self-healing machines.

In findings published last week in Nature Materials, researcher­s claim they have created a self-healing material — composed of liquid metal droplets suspended in a soft rubber — that can spontaneou­sly repair itself after sustaining “extreme mechanical damage.” “If we want to build machines that are more compatible with the human body and the natural environmen­t, we have to start with new types of materials,” said Carmel Majidi, an engineer at Carnegie Mellon University who directs the Integrated Soft Materials Laboratory. Researcher­s say their material is known as a “stretchabl­e electronic,” an evolving technology that combines electronic circuits and sensors with flexible elastic material. How does it work? When damaged, droplets suspended in the material rupture, forming new connection­s with neighborin­g droplets and rerouting electrical signals without interrupti­on. To demonstrat­e the material’s effectiven­ess, researcher­s powered a clock while simultaneo­usly damaging the conductive circuitry using a sharp object.

What makes their material unique, researcher­s say, is that it is able to conduct electricit­y, even when stretched, making it ideal for transmitti­ng data or maintainin­g power. If perfected, researcher­s believe stretchabl­e electronic­s could have numerous applicatio­ns: A robotic first responder that can enter treacherou­s environmen­ts without being damaged, wearable computers used by athletes or as a structure on Mars, where inhospitab­le temperatur­es and weather put technology at risk.

“Other research in soft electronic­s has resulted in materials that are elastic and deformable, but still vulnerable to mechanical damage that causes immediate electrical failure,” Majidi said. “The unpreceden­ted level of functional­ity of our self-healing material can enable softmatter electronic­s and machines to exhibit the extraordin­ary resilience of soft biological tissue and organisms.”

Carnegie Mellon researcher­s are far from alone in their quest to create self-repairing materials that could be used by robots at some point.

Researcher­s in Belgium last year created a robotic hand filled with a “jellylike” substance that can self-repair when heat is applied, according to New Scientist. “When you add heat, they (reorganize) to stick back together without leaving any weak spots.”

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