The next generation of robots will be shape-shifters
University of Bath
Physicists
have discovered a new way to coat soft robots in materials that allow them to
move and function in a more purposeful way. The research, led by the UK's
University of Bath, is described in Science Advances.Active matter: Wrapping an elastic ball (orange) in a layer
of tiny robots (blue) allows researchers to program
shape and behaviour. Image credit: Jack Binysh
Authors of the study believe their breakthrough modelling on 'active matter' could mark a turning point in the design of robots.
With further development of the
concept, it may be possible to determine the shape, movement and behaviour of a
soft solid not by its natural elasticity but by human-controlled activity on
its surface.
The surface of an ordinary soft material always shrinks into a sphere. Think of the way water beads into droplets: the beading occurs because the surface of liquids and other soft material naturally contracts into the smallest surface area possible -- i.e. a sphere.
But active matter can be designed to work
against this tendency. An example of this in action would be a rubber ball
that's wrapped in a layer of nano-robots, where the robots are programmed to
work in unison to distort the ball into a new, pre-determined shape (say, a
star).
It is hoped that active matter will lead to a new generation of machines whose function will come from the bottom up. So, instead of being governed by a central controller (the way today's robotic arms are controlled in factories), these new machines would be made from many individual active units that cooperate to determine the machine's movement and function. This is akin to the workings of our own biological tissues, such as the fibres in heart muscle.
Using
this idea, scientists could design soft machines with arms made of flexible
materials powered by robots embedded in their surface. They could also tailor
the size and shape of drug delivery capsules, by coating the surface of
nanoparticles in a responsive, active material.. This in turn could have a
dramatic effect on how a drug interacts with cells in the body.
Work
on active matter challenges the assumption that the energetic cost of the
surface of a liquid or soft solid must always be positive because a certain
amount of energy is always necessary to create a surface.
Dr
Jack Binysh, study first author, said: "Active matter makes us look at the
familiar rules of nature -- rules like the fact that surface tension has to be
positive -- in a new light. Seeing what happens if we break these rules, and
how we can harness the results, is an exciting place to be doing
research."
Corresponding
author Dr Anton Souslov added: "This study is an important proof of
concept and has many useful implications. For instance, future technology could
produce soft robots that are far squishier and better at picking up and
manipulating delicate materials."
For
the study, the researchers developed theory and simulations that described a 3D
soft solid whose surface experiences active stresses. They found that these
active stresses expand the surface of the material, pulling the solid
underneath along with it, and causing a global shape change. The researchers
found that the precise shape adopted by the solid could then be tailored by
altering the elastic properties of the material.
In
the next phase of this work -- which has already begun -- the researchers will
apply this general principle to design specific robots, such as soft arms or
self-swimming materials. They will also look at collective behaviour -- for
example, what happens when you have many active solids, all packed together.
This
work was a collaboration between the Universities of Bath and Birmingham. It
was funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
through New Investigator Award no. EP/T000961/1.