Valveless microliter combustion for densely packed arrays of powerful soft actuators.
Ronald H HeisserCameron A AubinOfek PeretzNicholas KincaidHyeon Seok AnElizabeth M FisherSadaf SobhaniPerrine PepiotAmir D GatRobert F ShepherdPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
Existing tactile stimulation technologies powered by small actuators offer low-resolution stimuli compared to the enormous mechanoreceptor density of human skin. Arrays of soft pneumatic actuators initially show promise as small-resolution (1- to 3-mm diameter), highly conformable tactile display strategies yet ultimately fail because of their need for valves bulkier than the actuators themselves. In this paper, we demonstrate an array of individually addressable, soft fluidic actuators that operate without electromechanical valves. We achieve this by using microscale combustion and localized thermal flame quenching. Precisely, liquid metal electrodes produce sparks to ignite fuel lean methane-oxygen mixtures in a 5-mm diameter, 2-mm tall silicone cylinder. The exothermic reaction quickly pressurizes the cylinder, displacing a silicone membrane up to 6 mm in under 1 ms. This device has an estimated free-inflation instantaneous stroke power of 3 W. The maximum reported operational frequency of these cylinders is 1.2 kHz with average displacements of ∼100 µm. We demonstrate that, at these small scales, the wall-quenching flame behavior also allows operation of a 3 × 3 array of 3-mm diameter cylinders with 4-mm pitch. Though we primarily present our device as a tactile display technology, it is a platform microactuator technology with application beyond this one.
Keyphrases
- high throughput
- aortic valve
- optic nerve
- high density
- ionic liquid
- mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- heart failure
- particulate matter
- single molecule
- ms ms
- risk assessment
- magnetic resonance imaging
- optical coherence tomography
- blood brain barrier
- big data
- carbon nanotubes
- quantum dots
- transcatheter aortic valve implantation
- left ventricular
- single cell
- reduced graphene oxide
- dual energy