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Bioinspired underwater locomotion of light-driven liquid crystal gels

Authors :
Zoey S. Davidson
Hamed Shahsavan
Amirreza Aghakhani
Arri Priimagi
Yubing Guo
Metin Sitti
Hao Zeng
Tampere University
Materials Science and Environmental Engineering
Sitti, Metin (ORCID 0000-0001-8249-3854 & YÖK ID 297104)
Shahsavan, Hamed
Aghakhani, Amirreza
Zeng, Hao
Guo, Yubing
Davidson, Zoey S.
Priimagi, Arri
School of Medicine
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2020.

Abstract

Soft-bodied aquatic invertebrates, such as sea slugs and snails, are capable of diverse locomotion modes under water. Recapitulation of such multimodal aquatic locomotion in small-scale soft robots is challenging, due to difficulties in precise spatiotemporal control of deformations and inefficient underwater actuation of existing stimuli-responsive materials. Solving this challenge and devising efficient untethered manipulation of soft stimuli-responsive materials in the aquatic environment would significantly broaden their application potential in biomedical devices. We mimic locomotion modes common to sea invertebrates using monolithic liquid crystal gels (LCGs) with inherent light responsiveness and molecular anisotropy. We elicit diverse underwater locomotion modes, such as crawling, walking, jumping, and swimming, by local deformations induced by selective spatiotemporal light illumination. Our results underpin the pivotal role of the physicomechanical properties of LCGs in the realization of diverse modes of light-driven robotic underwater locomotion. We envisage that our results will introduce a toolbox for designing efficient untethered soft robots for fluidic environments.<br />European Union (European Union); European Research Council (ERC), Project Phototune; Academy of Finland postdoctoral; Academy of Finland Flagship Programme (Photonics Research and Innovation); Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; Alexander von Humboldt Foundation; Max Planck Society

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8069c3359b3ce95344872a8307488084