(Press-News.org) Most animals can quickly transition from walking to jumping to crawling to swimming if needed without reconfiguring or making major adjustments.
Most robots cannot. But researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have created soft robots that can seamlessly shift from walking to swimming, for example, or crawling to rolling.
"We were inspired by nature to develop a robot that can perform different tasks and adapt to its environment without adding actuators or complexity," said Dinesh K. Patel, a post-doctoral fellow in the Morphing Matter Lab in the School of Computer Science's Human-Computer Interaction Institute. "Our bistable actuator is simple, stable and durable, and lays the foundation for future work on dynamic, reconfigurable soft robotics."
The bistable actuator is made of 3D-printed soft rubber containing shape-memory alloy springs that react to electrical currents by contracting, which causes the actuator to bend. The team used this bistable motion to change the actuator or robot's shape. Once the robot changes shape, it is stable until another electrical charge morphs it back to its previous configuration.
"Matching how animals transition from walking to swimming to crawling to jumping is a grand challenge for bio-inspired and soft robotics," said Carmel Majidi, a professor in the Mechanical Engineering Department in CMU's College of Engineering.
For example, one robot the team created has four curved actuators attached to the corners of a cellphone-sized body made of two bistable actuators. On land, the curved actuators act as legs, allowing the robot to walk. In the water, the bistable actuators change the robot's shape, putting the curved actuators in an ideal position to act as propellers so it can swim.
"You need to have legs to walk on land, and you need to have a propeller to swim in the water. Building a robot with separate systems designed for each environment adds complexity and weight," said Xiaonan Huang, an assistant professor of robotics at the University of Michigan and Majidi's former Ph.D. student. "We use the same system for both environments to create an efficient robot."
The team created two other robots: one that can crawl and jump, and one inspired by caterpillars and pill bugs that can crawl and roll.
The actuators require only a hundred millisecond of electrical charge to change their shape, and they are durable. The team had a person ride a bicycle over one of the actuators a few times and changed their robots' shapes hundreds of times to demonstrate durability.
In the future, the robots could be used in rescue situations or to interact with sea animals or coral. Using heat-activated springs in the actuators could open up applications in environmental monitoring, haptics, and reconfigurable electronics and communication.
"There are many interesting and exciting scenarios where energy-efficient and versatile robots like this could be useful," said Lining Yao, the Cooper-Siegel Assistant Professor in HCII and head of the Morphing Matter Lab.
The team's research, "Highly Dynamic Bistable Soft Actuator for Reconfigurable Multimodal Soft Robots," was featured on the cover of the January 2023 issue of Advanced Materials Technologies. The research team included co-first authors Patel and Huang; Yao; Majidi; Yichi Luo, a mechanical engineering master's student at CMU; and Mrunmayi Mungekar and M. Khalid Jawed, both from the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles.
END
Carnegie Mellon University researchers develop soft robot that shifts from land to sea with ease
Highly dynamic bistable soft actuators allow for varied locomotion
2023-03-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Future cargo ships could be powered by wind to fight climate change
2023-03-14
Scientists to retrofit large shipping vessels with ultramodern sails in efforts to cut carbon emissions
University of Southampton initiative will investigate how modern vessels perform on the ocean when fitted with the wing-sails
Funding from Innovate UK to investigate the potential of the technology and decarbonise the UK’s maritime sector
SHIPS of the future could once again be powered by wind if a pioneering project which retrofits large vessels with ultramodern wing-sails proves successful in cutting carbon emissions.
Scientists ...
Molecular biologist Shixin Liu receives Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Biomedical Science
2023-03-14
Shixin Liu receives the Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Biomedical Science for developing cutting-edge biophysical tools to directly visualize and understand the physiological function of nanometer-scale biomolecular machines such as those that carry out genome replication and gene transcription.
The Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise is a $50,000 prize awarded annually by the Vilcek Foundation as part of its prizes program. Awarded annually since 2006, the Vilcek Foundation prizes recognize and celebrate immigrant contributions to scientific research and discovery, and to artistic and cultural advancement in the United States. In addition ...
Researchers develop enhanced genetic animal model of Down syndrome
2023-03-14
National Institutes of Health researchers compared a new genetic animal model of Down syndrome to the standard model and found the updated version to be enhanced. The new mouse model shows milder cognitive traits compared to a previously studied Down syndrome mouse model. The results of this study, published in Biological Psychiatry, may help researchers develop more precise treatments to improve cognition in people with Down syndrome.
Scientists found that the new mouse model, known as Ts66Yah, had memory difficulties and behavior traits, but the symptoms were not as severe as seen with the ...
Climate change alters a human-raptor relationship
2023-03-14
Ithaca, NY— Bald Eagles and dairy farmers exist in a mutually beneficial relationship in parts of northwestern Washington State. According to a new study, this "win-win" relationship has been a more recent development, driven by the impact of climate change on eagles' traditional winter diet of salmon carcasses, as well as by increased eagle abundance following decades of conservation efforts. The research is published in the journal Ecosphere.
"The narrative ...
A mechanistic and probabilistic method for predicting wildfires
2023-03-14
Spanning long distances across variable terrains, electric power systems can spark wildfires in the event of dry weather and high winds. This may occur when conductor cables oscillate in such a way to become close to the surrounding vegetation.
Data from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection shows that between 2016-2020, at least five of the top 20 most destructive California wildfires started from power systems. Paired with the extreme weather conditions and nearby vegetation, ...
This is what happens when your phone is spying on you
2023-03-14
Smartphone spyware apps that allow people to spy on each other are not only hard to notice and detect, they also will easily leak the sensitive personal information they collect, says a team of computer scientists from New York and San Diego.
While publicly marketed as tools to monitor underage children and employees using their employer’s equipment, spyware apps are also frequently used by abusers to covertly spy on a spouse or a partner. These apps require little to no technical expertise from the abusers; offer detailed installation ...
New, non-invasive imaging tool maps uterine contractions during labor
2023-03-14
Researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health have developed a new imaging tool, called electromyometrial imaging (EMMI), to create real-time, three-dimensional images and maps of contractions during labor. The non-invasive imaging technique generates new types of images and metrics that can help quantify contraction patterns, providing foundational knowledge to improve labor management, particularly for preterm birth. The small study is supported in part by NIH’s Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) through its Human ...
Regional ECT, lithium, and clozapine use linked to lower suicide rates in male adolescents
2023-03-14
A new study from Karolinska Institutet suggests that electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), lithium, and clozapine may reduce suicide rates in adolescent men with severe mental illness, consistent with previous findings in adults. The study, published in Nature Communications, compared treatment and suicide rates across different regions in Sweden.
Annually, there are 800,000 suicide deaths worldwide. Suicide is the leading cause of death among teenagers and young adults, with up to 90 percent of those affected having a serious psychiatric illness ...
Imaging tech produces real-time 3D maps of uterine contractions during labor
2023-03-14
Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have developed new imaging technology that can produce 3D maps showing the magnitude and distribution of uterine contractions in real time and across the entire surface of the uterus during labor. Building on imaging methods long used on the heart, this technology can image uterine contractions noninvasively and in much greater detail than currently available tools, which only indicate the presence or absence of a contraction.
The ...
Tech could help BC farmers reach customers, mitigate climate change impacts
2023-03-14
Technology exists that the BC government could leverage to help small farmers connect directly with consumers and also mitigate climate change impacts, say new findings from UBC Okanagan.
Dr. John Janmaat and Dr. Joanne Taylor co-authored new research that examines how farmers in the Okanagan and Cariboo regions of BC are adapting compared to farmers in China’s Shaanxi province. One of the key differences was how Chinese farmers used technology and social media, an option that’s not as widely used in ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Adverse childhood experiences in firstborns associated with poor mental health of siblings
Montana State scientists publish new research on ancient life found in Yellowstone hot springs
Generative AI bias poses risk to democratic values
Study examines how African farmers are adapting to mountain climate change
Exposure to air pollution associated with more hospital admissions for lower respiratory infections
Microscopy approach offers new way to study cancer therapeutics at single-cell level
How flooding soybeans in early reproductive stages impacts yield, seed composition
Gene therapy may be “one shot stop” for rare bone disease
Protection for small-scale producers and the environment?
Researchers solve a fluid mechanics mystery
New grant funds first-of-its-kind gene therapy to treat aggressive brain cancer
HHS external communications pause prevents critical updates on current public health threats
New ACP guideline on migraine prevention shows no clinically important advantages for newer, expensive medications
Revolutionary lubricant prevents friction at high temperatures
Do women talk more than men? It might depend on their age
The right kind of fusion neutrons
The cost of preventing extinction of Australia’s priority species
JMIR Publications announces new CEO
NCSA awards 17 students Fiddler Innovation Fellowships
How prenatal alcohol exposure affects behavior into adulthood
Does the neuron know the electrode is there?
Vilcek Foundation celebrates immigrant scientists with $250,000 in prizes
Age and sex differences in efficacy of treatments for type 2 diabetes
Octopuses have some of the oldest known sex chromosomes
High-yield rice breed emits up to 70% less methane
Long COVID prevalence and associated activity limitation in US children
Intersection of race and rurality with health care–associated infections and subsequent outcomes
Risk of attempted and completed suicide in persons diagnosed with headache
Adolescent smartphone use during school hours
Alarming rise in rates of advanced prostate cancer in California
[Press-News.org] Carnegie Mellon University researchers develop soft robot that shifts from land to sea with easeHighly dynamic bistable soft actuators allow for varied locomotion