Forget steel and aluminum. The robots of tomorrow may be able to squish, stretch and squeeze.
Novel robotic devices, part of the emerging field of soft robotics, offer many advances over conventional robots. Soft robots can more easily maneuver in tough spaces. They can better interact with humans, making them excellent assistants for elderly people. And one day they may lead to
Creating artificial muscles requires not only developing a powerful, flexible material, but figuring out how to precisely control and cleverly manufacture it. That’s the mission of Kwang Kim of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and his National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded team.
Kim is lead investigator on a NSF award pairing a diverse group of researchers — at four U.S. universities plus research institutions in Japan and South Korea — to transform a novel
PIRE leverages U.S. funding and expertise to tackle global challenges. Kim’s U.S. team is working with researchers from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) and Japan’s National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, both known for strong expertise in robotics. (KAIST, for example, won the recent Robotics Challenge, hosted by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.)
One of the big challenges in soft robotics is finding the right material. «It has to be soft, but it also has to produce enough power to do lots of different things," Kim said. His team is using a type of synthetic material called Ionic
«In robotics you’ve got to be able to move and you’ve got to be able to sense," said Kam Leang, an associate professor at the University of Utah Robotics Center and a
Electroactive polymers can also be used to sense motion, making them a great candidate for soft robotics. Leang and his colleagues have also devised a way to
The project, which received NSF funding last fall, is still in its early stages. Kim, who has been working in electroactive polymers for nearly two decades, said soft robotics itself is still a relatively new field.
Source: http://www.nsf.gov/mobile/discoveries/disc_summ.jsp?cntn_id=138883&org=NSF