Origami-like soft robot can lift 1000 times its weight

Soft robotics allow machines to move in ways which mimic living organisms, but increased flexibility usually means reduced strength , which limits its use. Now, scientists at MIT CSAIL & Harvard have developed origami-like artificial muscles that add much-needed strength to soft robots, allowing them to lift objects as much as 1, 000 times their own weight using only water or air pressure. One 2.6 gram muscle is able to lift a 3 kilogram object, which is the same as a duck lifting a car. The artificial muscles are made up of a plastic inner skeleton surrounded by air or water inside a sealed bag — the “skin”. Applying a vacuum to the inside of the bag initiates the muscle’s movement, creating tension that drives the motion. No power source or human input is needed to direct the muscle, as it’s guided purely by the composition of the skeleton . In experiments, the researchers created muscles that can lift a flower off the ground, twist into a coil and contract down to 10 percent of their original size. They even made a muscle out of a water-soluble polymer, which means the technology could be used in natural setting with minimal environmental impact . Other potential applications include deep sea research, minimally invasive surgery and transformable architecture. The muscles are scalable — the team built them at sizes ranging from a few millimeters up to a meter — and cheap to produce. A single muscle can be made in under ten minutes for less than a dollar. Even the research team itself was surprised by how effective the technology is. “We were very surprised by how strong the muscles were. We expected they’d have a higher maximum functional weight than ordinary soft robots, but we didn’t expect a thousand-fold increase, ” said CSAIL director Daniela Rus. “It’s like giving these robots superpowers .”

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Origami-like soft robot can lift 1000 times its weight

Sea slug muscle powers this ‘biohybrid’ robot

Some scientists make robots inspired by sea slugs . But this team from Case Western Reserve University took a muscle from a real slug and used it to make a biohybrid robot. To be exact, the group took the muscle from around a California sea hare’s mouth and attached it to 3D-printed parts. When induced by electrical stimuli, the muscle contracts, causing the hybrid to crawl forward. They chose sea slugs for this project, because the animals are known for being able to withstand sudden and substantial changes in temperature and salinity. Since the marine invertebrates are tough and can adapt to different conditions, the resulting robots are just as durable and can also operate in harsh environments. A biohybrid robot can be more capable, perform more tasks and be cheaper to make than purely manmade ones. Someday, organizations could deploy swarms of robots like this to, say, locate the source of toxic leaks or to scour the ocean for a plane’s black box. The team has a lot to do before their creation’s capable of those tasks, though, such as finding a way to make the slug machine go just a wee bit faster — their 2-inch robot can only move at a rate of 0.4 centimeters per minute. Via: PopSci Source: Case Western Reserve University

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Sea slug muscle powers this ‘biohybrid’ robot

First Ever Lab-Grown Muscle That Can Heal Itself in Living Creatures

Anyone who’s ever torn a muscle will be grateful for that fact that the fibers can repair themselves. But now, researchers have developed lab-grown muscle that can achieve the exact same thing . Read more…

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First Ever Lab-Grown Muscle That Can Heal Itself in Living Creatures