Researchers at Northwestern University have developed a new material that acts as a soft robot. They said the lifelike construct can walk at human speed, pick up and transport cargo to a new location, climb up hills, and even breakdance to release a particle. Nearly 90% water by weight, the centimeter-sized robot moves without complex hardware, hydraulics or electricity. Instead, it is activated by light and walks in the direction of an external rotating magnetic field.
Soft robot moves molecules
Resembling a four-legged octopus, the robot functions inside a water-filled tank, making it ideal for use in aquatic environments. The researchers said the movements of miniature robots could be customized to help catalyze different chemical reactions and then pump out the valuable products.
The soft robots also could be molecularly designed to recognize and actively remove unwanted particles in specific environments, or use their mechanical movements and locomotion to precisely deliver bio-therapeutics or cells to specific tissues.
“Conventional robots are typically heavy machines with lots of hardware and electronics that are unable to interact safely with soft structures, including humans,” said Samuel I. Stupp, who led the experimental research. “We have designed soft materials with molecular intelligence to enable them to behave like robots of any size and perform useful functions in tiny spaces, underwater or underground.”
“By combining walking and steering motions together, we can program specific sequences of magnetic fields, which remotely operate the robot and direct it to follow paths on flat or inclined surfaces,” added Monica Olvera de la Cruz, who led the theoretical work. “This programmable feature allows us to direct the robot through narrow passages with complex routes.”
The research was published this week in the journal Science Robotics. Northwestern University is in Evanston, Ill.
Stupp is board of trustees professor of materials science and engineering, chemistry, medicine and biomedical engineering at Northwestern. He has appointments in the McCormick School of Engineering, the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, and the Feinberg School of Medicine. Olvera de la Cruz is the Lawyer Taylor professor of materials science and eEngineering, chemistry, and chemical and biological engineering at McCormick.
Stupp and Olvera de la Cruz also are the director and deputy director, respectively, of the Center for Bio-Inspired Energy Science, a Northwestern-based Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
Northwestern makes advances in soft matter
The study builds on Stupp’s previous work to design “robotic soft matter” that imitates living sea creatures. In the previous study, published earlier this year, the robotic material could bend over time scales of minutes and crawl on a surface by taking one step every 12 hours. Now, the current breakthrough allows the robot to walk with human speed — about one step per second — and respond to magnetic fields that steer these materials to follow specific trajectories.
By coupling responses to light and magnetic fields, the researchers designed a soft robot that can also pick up cargo and deliver it to a destination by walking or rolling. It then drops the cargo at the new location by either inverting its shape — allowing smooth payloads to gently slide off the robot — or performing a spinning “break dance” to dislodge and release stickier objects.
“The design of the new materials that imitate living creatures allows not only a faster response, but also the performance of more sophisticated functions,” Stupp said. “We can change the shape and add legs to the synthetic creatures, and give these lifelike materials new walking gaits and smarter behaviors. This makes them highly versatile and amenable to different tasks.”
Ferromagnetic control
The secret to the robot’s precise movement and agility lies within its water-filled structure and the embedded skeleton of aligned nickel filaments that are ferromagnetic. The soft component is a molecularly designed network with parts that allow it to respond to light, hold or expel water in its interior, and have just the right stiffness to respond rapidly to magnetic fields.
The Northwestern team used chemical synthesis to program the molecules within the hydrogel to respond to light. When exposed to light, the robot’s molecules become hydrophobic — repelling water — causing the water molecules to escape. This conversion causes the robot to “come alive” by bending from a flat position to “standing.”
The researchers discovered that this bending enables the material to respond rapidly to rotating magnetic fields, activating its ability to walk fast. When the light turns off, the molecules revert back to their original state, and the robot goes flat, but it is ready anytime for a new cycle of activity under a magnetic field when prompted by an LED.
When exposed to rotating magnetic fields, the embedded skeleton in the bent robot exerts cyclic forces on the soft molecular network and activates the legs. The rotating field can be programmed to navigate the robot along a pre-determined path.
“Using theory and computation, we can calculate the response to light and magnetic fields,” Olvera de la Cruz said. “This allows us to predict and program walking trajectories with great accuracy.”
Possible applications for new soft robots
Stupp and Olvera de la Cruz imagine these soft robotic materials potentially could be used to create objects for many applications, including chemical production, new tools for environmentally important technologies or as smart biomaterials for highly advanced medicine.
“Eventually, we’d like to make armies of microrobots that could perform a complicated task in a coordinated way,” Stupp said. “We can tweak them molecularly to interact with one another to imitate swarming of birds and bacteria in nature or schools of fish in the ocean. The molecular versatility of the platform could lead to applications that have not been conceived at this point.”
The study, “Fast and programmable locomotion of hydrogel-metal hybrids under light and magnetic fields,” was supported by the Center for Bio-Inspired Energy Science, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy Sciences (award No. DE-SC0000989).
Postdoctoral fellow Chuang Li and graduate student Garrett Lau of the Stupp lab and Hang Yuan, a graduate student in the Olvera de la Cruz lab, are the primary authors of the paper. Other coauthors include Northwestern faculty members Danna Freedman and Pedram Khalili.
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