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New Study Helps Explain the Surprising Behavior of Tiny 'Artificial Muscles' (w/ Video)

New Study Helps Explain the Surprising Behavior of Tiny 'Artificial Muscles' (w/ Video)

(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- Using neutron beams and atomic-force microscopes, a team of university researchers working with the National Institute of Standards and Technology may have resolved a 10-year-old question about an exotic class of "artificial muscles" -- how do they work? Their results* could influence the design of future specialized robotic tools.

These 鈥渁rtificial muscles,鈥 first demonstrated in the early 1990s, are 鈥渋onic polymer metal composite鈥 (IPMC) actuators, a thin polymer strip plated on both surfaces with conducting metal. The basic unit of the polymer molecule has a charged component attached to it (hence, 鈥渋onic鈥), and it forms a sort of open, permeable structure that can be soaked with and oppositely charged ions. A modest electric charge across the metalized surfaces will cause the strip to flex in one direction; an alternating charge will make it wiggle like a fish鈥檚 tail. But why?

鈥淭here has been a lot of debate as to the mechanism of actuation in these kinds of systems,鈥 says NIST materials scientist Kirt Page. One possibility was that the electric charge on the metalized faces causes the polymer and the free ions to reorient themselves next to the metal, stretching one side and contracting the other. But using a at the NIST Center for Neutron Research (NCNR) to watch an IPMC in action as it wiggled back and forth, the team found something very different. are particularly good for mapping the locations of water molecules, and they showed that a major force in the is hydraulics. 鈥淭he water and ions move to one electrode swelling one side and dehydrating the other, causing that to contract, and it bends in that direction,鈥 explains Virginia Tech professor Robert Moore, who directed the research. 鈥淭hen you flip the potential, the ions come screaming back鈥攑ositive ions again moving towards the new negative 鈥攁nd you can go back and forth.鈥

Flexing muscle: IPMC actuator bending under an applied electrical voltage. As the polarity of the 3-volt potential is switched, the actuator bends back and forth. Credit: R. Moore, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

It happens surprisingly fast, according to Page. 鈥淧eople weren鈥檛 quite convinced that water could actually move over these distances that quickly,鈥 he says, 鈥淭his paper is the first to show that in fact, this gradient in the water concentration is established almost instantaneously.鈥

A better understanding of just how IPMC actuators work could allow researchers to engineer better materials of this type with improved performance. Current actuators can be small and light-weight, and they can flex over relatively large distances, but the force they can generate is low so these 鈥渕uscles鈥 are not very strong, according to Moore. They could be used in microfluidic systems as pumps or valves, as tiny robotic grippers in applications where other actuators are impractical or even, says Moore, 鈥渁s actual in living tissues. I think we鈥檙e still in the infancy stage of using these. There are still quite a number of details about the mechanism that we need to unlock.鈥

More information: * J.K. Park, P.J. Jones, C. Sahagun, K.A. Page, D.S. Hussey, D.L. Jacobson, S.E. Morgan and R.B. Moore. Electrically stimulated gradients in water and counterion concentrations within electroactive polymer actuators Soft Matter. 2010. 6. 1444-1452.

Citation: New Study Helps Explain the Surprising Behavior of Tiny 'Artificial Muscles' (w/ Video) (2010, April 27) retrieved 22 May 2025 from /news/2010-04-behavior-tiny-artificial-muscles-video.html
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