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    Home»Technology»New Grasshopper-Like Material Can Leap 200 Times Its Own Thickness
    Technology

    New Grasshopper-Like Material Can Leap 200 Times Its Own Thickness

    By University of Colorado at BoulderFebruary 20, 20231 Comment4 Mins Read
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    Futuristic Technology Material Concept
    The recent discovery of the material offers new possibilities for utilizing polymer materials in innovative ways, particularly in the field of soft robotics, where you often need fast and powerful actuation mechanisms.

    Researchers designed a heat-activated, jumping film from liquid crystal elastomers, demonstrating potential for soft robotics with high-speed actuation.

    Engineers at the University of Colorado Boulder have created a new, rubber-like film that can jump high into the air independently, mimicking the motion of a grasshopper, without any external assistance. Just heat it up and watch it jump!

    The researchers have documented their accomplishment in a paper recently published in the journal Science Advances. They predict that similar materials could one day help embody “soft robots” (those that don’t need gears or other hard components to move) to leap or lift.

    The material composite responds a bit like how grasshoppers jump by storing and releasing energy in their legs, said study co-author Timothy White.

    “In nature, a lot of adaptations like a grasshopper’s leg utilize stored energy, such as an elastic instability,” said White, Gallogly Professor of chemical and biological engineering at CU Boulder. “We’re trying to create synthetic materials that emulate those natural properties.”

    The new research takes advantage of the unusual behavior of a class of materials called liquid crystal elastomers. These materials are solid and stretchy polymer versions of the liquid crystals found in laptops or TV displays.


    A video showing the material jumping. Credit: University of Colorado at Boulder

    In the study, the team fabricated small wafers of liquid crystal elastomers about the size of a contact lens, then set them on a hot plate. As those films heated up, they began to warp, forming a cone that rose up until, suddenly and explosively, it flipped inside out—shooting the material up to a height of nearly 200 times its own thickness in just 6 milliseconds.

    “This presents opportunities for using polymer materials in new ways for applications like soft robotics where we often need access to these high-speed, high-force actuation mechanisms,” said study lead author Tayler Hebner who earned her doctorate degree in chemical and biological engineering at CU Boulder in 2022.

    Serendipitous Discovery

    Hebner, now a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oregon, and her colleagues discovered this leaping behavior almost by accident.

    She was experimenting with designing different kinds of liquid crystal elastomers to see how they changed their shape under shifting temperatures. Joselle McCracken, a senior research associate in White’s lab, joined her to observe.

    “We were just watching the liquid crystal elastomer sit on the hot plate wondering why it wasn’t making the shape we expected. It suddenly jumped right off the testing stage onto the countertop,” Hebner said. “We both just looked at each other kind of confused but also excited.”

    With careful experimentation and help from collaborators at the California Institute of Technology, the team discovered what was making their material do the high jump.

    White explained that each of these films are made up of three layers of elastomer. These layers shrink when they get hot, he said, but the top two layers shrink faster than the bottom one. That incongruity, combined with the orientation of the liquid crystal molecules within the layers, causes the film to contract and form a cone shape. It’s a bit like how painted vinyl sidings can warp in the sun’s rays.

    As the cone forms, strain builds up in the film until, all at once—snap! The cone inverts, slapping the surface and knocking the material up. The same film can also hop several times without wearing out.

    “When that inversion happens, the material snaps through, and just like a kid’s popper toy, it leaps off the surface,” White said.

    Leaps Forward

    Unlike those poppers, however, the team’s liquid crystal elastomers are versatile. The researchers can tweak their films so that they hop when they get cold, for example, not hot. They can also give the films legs to make them jump in a particular direction.

    Most robots probably wouldn’t be able to use this kind of popping effect to make their parts move. But White said that the project shows what similar kinds of materials could be capable of—storing an impressive amount of elastic energy, then releasing it in a single go. And, Hebner said, the project brought a bit of fun to the lab.

    “It’s a powerful example of how the fundamental concepts we study can transform into designs that perform in complex and amazing ways,” she said.

    Grasshoppers, meet your new competition.

    Reference: “Leaping liquid crystal elastomers” by Tayler S. Hebner, Kevin Korner, Christopher N. Bowman, Kaushik Bhattacharya and Timothy J. White, 18 January 2023, Science Advances.
    DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ade1320

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    Chemical Engineering Materials Science Robotics University of Colorado at Boulder
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    1 Comment

    1. Ai Ruihu on February 21, 2023 10:50 pm

      Flubber??

      Reply
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