PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Wearable robots you can wear like clothes: automatic weaving of “fabric muscle” brings commercialization closer

Automated weaving of ultra-light SMA-based fabric muscle enables mass production, powering the first wearable robot that assists three joints simultaneously

2025-10-29
(Press-News.org) The commercialization of clothing-type wearable robots has taken a significant step forward with the development of equipment that can continuously and automatically weave ultra-thin shape memory alloy coil yarn—thinner than a human hair—into lightweight and flexible “fabric muscle” suitable for large-scale production.

The Advanced Robotics Research Center at the Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials (KIMM, President Seog-Hyeon Ryu), under the National Research Council of Science & Technology (NST, Chairman Young-Shik Kim), led by Principal Researcher Cheol Hoon Park, has developed an automated weaving system that enables the continuous mass production of fabric muscle, a lightweight yet powerful artificial muscle actuator.

The newly developed system uses shape memory alloy (SMA) wire with a diameter of 25 μm—about one-fourth the thickness of a human hair—processed into coil-shaped yarn, enabling the continuous weaving of fabric muscles. This fabric, weighing only 10 g, can lift 10–15 kg, making it an ideal core actuator for clothing-type wearable robots. The SMA coil yarn previously developed by KIMM used a metallic core wire, which resulted in low elongation and made automatic weaving difficult. To overcome this limitation, the KIMM research team replaced the metal core with natural fiber, redesigned the structure and fabrication process of the fabric muscle, and improved the weaving machine’s design, thereby achieving stable and continuous mass production.

Conventional wearable robots designed to assist multiple joints—such as the elbow, shoulder, and waist—relied on heavy, noisy motor or pneumatic actuators, making them bulky, expensive, and uncomfortable for long-term use. As a result, most could provide only limited support to specific joints. Active assistance for the shoulder has been particularly challenging due to its complex range of motion. In contrast, KIMM’s fabric muscle actuators are lightweight and flexible, allowing them to naturally conform to and actively assist multiple complex joints simultaneously. Using this technology, the research team developed the world’s first clothing-type wearable robot, weighing less than 2 kg, that simultaneously assists the elbow, shoulder, and waist, reducing muscle effort by more than 40% during repetitive physical tasks.

Furthermore, the team created an ultra-lightweight shoulder-assist robot weighing just 840 g, which patients with muscle weakness can comfortably wear and carry in daily life. In clinical trials conducted at Seoul National University Hospital (SNUH) on patients with muscular weakness, including those with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, the wearable shoulder-assist robot improved shoulder movement range by more than 57%.

With the ability to continuously produce high-quality, uniform fabric muscle through the automated weaving system, the research team has laid the foundation for the commercialization of clothing-type wearable robots.

This breakthrough is expected to reduce workers’ physical strain, improve patients’ quality of life, and accelerate the widespread adoption of wearable robots, thereby enhancing industrial competitiveness. In particular, the shoulder-assist robot, designed to support rehabilitation and daily activities of patients with muscle weakness, is expected to reduce caregiver burden while improving patient independence, quality of life, and self-esteem, and overall well-being.

“Our development of continuous mass-production technology for fabric muscle—the key component of clothing-type wearable robots—will significantly improve quality of life in fields such as healthcare, logistics, and construction,” said Dr. Cheol Hoon Park, Principal Researcher at KIMM’s Advanced Robotics Research Center. “We will continue to build on KIMM’s extensive wearable robotics technologies to accelerate commercialization and lead the global wearable robotics market.”

This research, which won the KIMM Best Research Award 2024, was supported by KIMM’s ACE program, the Core Robot Technology Development Program of the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources (MOTIR), and the Seoul National University Hospital (SNUH) Lee Kun-hee Child Cancer and Rare Disease Project. The findings were published online in the October 2025 issue of TNSRE (IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering), a leading international journal in the field of rehabilitation engineering.

Attachments:

Reference Material: Photo(Research Team led by Dr. Cheol Hoon Park)

 

 

###

The Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials (KIMM) is a non-profit government-funded research institute under the Ministry of Science and ICT. Since its foundation in 1976, KIMM is contributing to economic growth of the nation by performing R&D on key technologies in machinery and materials, conducting reliability test evaluation, and commercializing the developed products and technologies.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researcher improves century-old equation to predict movement of dangerous air pollutants.

2025-10-29
A new method developed at the University of Warwick offers the first simple and predictive way to calculate how irregularly shaped nanoparticles — a dangerous class of airborne pollutant — move through air. Every day, we breathe in millions of microscopic particles, including soot, dust, pollen, microplastics, viruses, and synthetic nanoparticles. Some are small enough to slip deep into the lungs and even enter the bloodstream, contributing to conditions such as heart disease, stroke, and cancer. Most of these airborne particles are irregularly shaped. Yet the mathematical models used to predict how these particles behave typically ...

Heatwaves linked to rise in sleep apnoea cases in Europe

2025-10-29
During heatwaves, there is an increase in the number of people suffering with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), according to a major study published today (Wednesday) in the European Respiratory Journal [1].   People with OSA often snore loudly, their breathing starts and stops during the night, and they may wake up several times. Not only does this cause excessive sleepiness, but it can also increase the risk of high blood pressure, stroke, heart disease and type 2 diabetes.   Researchers say their findings are particularly important as heatwaves are becoming more frequent and intense due to climate change.   The ...

Down‑top strategy engineered large‑scale fluorographene/PBO nanofibers composite papers with excellent wave‑transparent performance and thermal conductivity

2025-10-29
As 5G/6G communications, aerospace systems, and high-frequency electronics advance, the demand for lightweight, wave-transparent, and thermally conductive materials has become increasingly urgent. Now, researchers from the Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Macromolecular Science and Technology at Northwestern Polytechnical University, led by Professor Junliang Zhang and Professor Junwei Gu, have developed a groundbreaking down–top strategy to fabricate fluorographene/poly(p-phenylene benzobisoxazole) nanofiber (FG/PNF) composite papers with exceptional wave-transparent performance, thermal conductivity, and mechanical ...

The Lancet: Climate change inaction being paid for in millions of lives every year

2025-10-29
New global findings in the 9th annual indicator report of the Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change reveal that the continued over reliance on fossil fuels and failure to adapt to climate change is being paid in people’s lives, health, and livelihoods, with 12 of 20 indicators tracking health threats reaching unprecedented levels. The report says failure to curb the warming effects of climate change has seen the rate of heat-related deaths surge 23% since the 1990s, to 546,000 a year. In 2024 alone, air pollution from wildfire smoke was linked to a record 154,000 deaths, ...

New insights reveal how coral gets a grip

2025-10-29
QUT researchers have uncovered critical biological processes that allow corals attach to a reef in a finding that could significantly improve coral restoration efforts worldwide. The study published in Royal Society Open Science, led by Dr Brett Lewis from the QUT School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, investigated how coral fragments from three species, Montipora mollis, Pocillopora verrucosa and Acropora millepora, develop self-sustaining attachment to reef surfaces. “Coral reefs are declining globally, and their recovery often depends on broken fragments reattaching and growing but that process isn’t as simple as it sounds,” Dr Lewis ...

Home treatment with IV antibiotics could relieve NHS pressure

2025-10-29
Treating patients at home with IV antibiotics, rather than in a clinical setting, could halve costs to the NHS and relieve pressure on hospital beds – according to a University of East Anglia study. Researchers investigated whether having antibiotics prepared at home and continuously delivered into the bloodstream by an elastomeric pump would be a viable option. They found that both patients and clinicians were happy with this method, and that it could save the NHS more than £3,500 per patient. If rolled out nationally, the team ...

AI ECG better detects severe heart attacks in emergency setting

2025-10-28
Using artificial intelligence (AI) to analyze electrocardiograms (ECG) improved detection of severe heart attacks, including those that presented with unconventional symptoms, or atypical ECG patterns, and reduced false positives, according to a study published in JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions and simultaneously presented at TCT 2025 in San Francisco. ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is a severe type of heart attack where a major coronary artery is blocked, preventing blood flow to the heart muscle. Quickly restoring blood flow, ...

Straw-based biochar and smart irrigation help maize thrive with less water and fertilizer

2025-10-28
A new study has revealed that the lasting effects of biochar depend strongly on the material it is made from, with straw-derived biochar offering clear advantages for maize productivity under limited-water conditions. The research, published in Biochar, shows that combining wheat-straw biochar with an alternate partial root-zone drying irrigation system can boost crop yield and resource efficiency for at least two growing seasons after a single biochar application. Biochar, a carbon-rich material produced by heating plant residues, has long been ...

‘Broken’ genes a common factor in marsupial fur colour

2025-10-28
The distinctive coloured fur of two of Australia's rarest marsupials could be caused by 'broken' pigment genes, new research from La Trobe University has found. The elusive desert-dwelling marsupial mole and the black-coated morph of the endangered eastern quoll are two of a growing number of marsupials showing common colour oddities. In many species, colour oddities like melanism and xanthism are considered chromatic disorders and are detrimental to an animal’s survival. But in research published ...

Turning waste into clean water: Magnetic carbon materials remove toxic pollutants from wastewater

2025-10-28
As global water resources face increasing pressure from industrial and agricultural activities, scientists are looking for innovative ways to clean and reuse wastewater sustainably. Researchers from Dalhousie University have now developed a simple and eco-friendly method to turn agricultural and forestry waste into powerful magnetic materials that can effectively remove toxic chemicals from water. The study, published in Sustainable Carbon Materials, introduces magnetic carbon adsorbents made from two common waste ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UMD team finds E. coli, other pathogens in Potomac River after sewage spill

New vaccine platform promotes rare protective B cells

Apes share human ability to imagine

Major step toward a quantum-secure internet demonstrated over city-scale distance

Increasing toxicity trends impede progress in global pesticide reduction commitments

Methane jump wasn’t just emissions — the atmosphere (temporarily) stopped breaking it down

Flexible governance for biological data is needed to reduce AI’s biosecurity risks

Increasing pesticide toxicity threatens UN goal of global biodiversity protection by 2030

How “invisible” vaccine scaffolding boosts HIV immune response

Study reveals the extent of rare earthquakes in deep layer below Earth’s crust

Boston College scientists help explain why methane spiked in the early 2020s

Penn Nursing study identifies key predictors for chronic opioid use following surgery

KTU researcher’s study: Why Nobel Prize-level materials have yet to reach industry

Research spotlight: Interplay of hormonal contraceptive use, stress and cardiovascular risk in women

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Catherine Prater awarded postdoctoral fellowship from the American Heart Association

AI agents debate more effectively when given personalities and the ability to interrupt

Tenecteplase for acute non–large vessel occlusion 4.5 to 24 hours after ischemic stroke

Immune 'hijacking' predicts cancer evolution

VIP-2 experiment narrows the search for exotic physics beyond the Pauli exclusion principle

A global challenge posed by the presence of pharmaceuticals in the environment

Dream engineering can help solve ‘puzzling’ questions

Sport: ‘Football fever’ peaks on match day

Scientists describe a window into evolution before the tree of life

Survival of patients diagnosed with cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic

Growth trajectories in infants from families with plant-based or omnivorous dietary patterns

Korea University College of Medicine hosts lecture by Austrian neuropathology expert, Professor Adelheid Wöhrer

5-FU chemotherapy linked to rare brain toxicity in cancer patient

JMIR Publications introduces the new Karma program: A merit-based reward system dedicated to peer review excellence

H5N1 causes die-off of Antarctic skuas, a seabird

Study suggests protein made in the liver is a key factor in men’s bone health

[Press-News.org] Wearable robots you can wear like clothes: automatic weaving of “fabric muscle” brings commercialization closer
Automated weaving of ultra-light SMA-based fabric muscle enables mass production, powering the first wearable robot that assists three joints simultaneously