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Bioinspir Biomim ; 16(4)2021 06 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33975299

RESUMO

Stimuli-responsive actuating materials offer a promising way to power insect-scale robots, but a vast majority of these material systems are too soft for load bearing in different applications. While strategies for active stiffness control have been developed for humanoid-scale robots, for insect-scale counterparts for which compactness and functional complexity are essential requirements, these strategies are too bulky to be applicable. Here, we introduce a method whereby the same actuating material serves not only as the artificial muscles to power an insect-scale robot for load bearing, but also to increase the robot stiffness on-demand, by bending it to increase the second moment of area. This concept is biomimetically inspired by how insect wings stiffen themselves, and is realized here with manganese dioxide as a high-performing electrochemical actuating material printed on metallized polycarbonate films as the robot bodies. Using an open-electrodeposition printing method, the robots can be rapidly fabricated in one single step in ∼15 minutes, and they can be electrochemically actuated by a potential of ∼1 V to produce large bending of ∼500° in less than 5 s. With the stiffness enhancement method, fast (∼5 s) and reversible stiffness tuning with a theoretical increment by ∼4000 times is achieved in a micro-robotic arm at ultra-low potential input of ∼1 V, resulting in an improvement in load-bearing capability by about 4 times from ∼10µN to ∼41µN.


Assuntos
Insetos , Robótica , Asas de Animais , Animais , Músculos
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