Strong, flexible artificial muscles designed
October 14th, 2011 - 3:32 pm ICT by IANSToronto, Oct 14 (IANS) New artificial muscles as flexible as an elephant’s trunk but strong enough to rotate objects two thousand times their own weight, have been designed by researchers.
Using yarns of carbon nanotubes that are enormously strong, tough and highly flexible, researchers developed the artificial muscles that can rotate 250 degrees per mm of muscle length.
This is more than a thousand times that of available artificial muscles composed of shape memory alloys and polymers, among others, a class of materials that can hold both positive and negative electric charges, the journal Science Express reports.
“These barely visible yarns composed of fibres 10,000 times thinner than a human hair, can move and rapidly rotate objects two thousand times their own weight,” says John Madden, associate professor in electrical engineering, University of British Columbia (UBC).
This new generation of low cost artificial muscles could be used to make tiny valves, positioners, pumps, stirrers and flagella for use in drug discovery, precision assembly and perhaps even to propel tiny objects inside the bloodstream, says Madden, according to a UBC statement.
The new material was devised at the University of Texas at Dallas and then tested as an artificial muscle in Madden’s lab at the UBC. A chance discovery by collaborators from Wollongong University in Australia showed the enormous twist developed by the device.
- Synthetic muscles make nanobots effective - Oct 18, 2011
- New nanosponge can clean seas of oil spills - Apr 17, 2012
- Bionic hand comes closer to reality - Apr 25, 2010
- 1 ounce of new 'frozen smoke' can carpet 3 football fields! - Jan 13, 2011
- Carbon nanotubes twice as strong as once believed - Sep 16, 2010
- Carbon nanotubes in lithium batteries improve energy capacity - Jun 21, 2010
- Mobile battery life could last months thanks to nanotechnology - Mar 11, 2011
- Alcohol may soon power artificial muscles for robots, prosthetic limbs - Jul 11, 2009
- New scaffold designed to fix a broken heart - Aug 10, 2010
- New high-performance fiber promises better bulletproof vests, airplanes - Dec 04, 2010
- Copper nanowires could pave way for foldable iPad - Jun 02, 2010
- Silver and gold nanowires to improve touch screens - May 25, 2010
- Want to look underwater? Use robo-fish - May 29, 2009
- Hydrogen-powered device mimics human muscle size, strength - Dec 13, 2009
- Solar power goes viral for peak efficiency - Apr 26, 2011
Tags: artificial muscle, artificial muscles, carbon nanotubes, chance discovery, drug discovery, electrical engineering university, flagella, human hair, john madden, journal science, muscle length, negative electric charges, precision assembly, science express, shape memory alloys, stirrers, tiny objects, university in australia, university of british columbia, university of texas at dallas