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Biodegradable electrohydraulic actuators for sustainable soft robots.

Ellen H RumleyDavid PreningerAlona Shagan ShomronPhilipp RothemundFlorian HartmannMelanie BaumgartnerNicholas KellarisAndreas StojanovicZachary YoderBenjamin KarrerChristoph KeplingerMartin Kaltenbrunner
Published in: Science advances (2023)
Combating environmental pollution demands a focus on sustainability, in particular from rapidly advancing technologies that are poised to be ubiquitous in modern societies. Among these, soft robotics promises to replace conventional rigid machines for applications requiring adaptability and dexterity. For key components of soft robots, such as soft actuators, it is thus important to explore sustainable options like bioderived and biodegradable materials. We introduce systematically determined compatible materials systems for the creation of fully biodegradable, high-performance electrohydraulic soft actuators, based on various biodegradable polymer films, ester-based liquid dielectric, and NaCl-infused gelatin hydrogel. We demonstrate that these biodegradable actuators reliably operate up to high electric fields of 200 V/μm, show performance comparable to nonbiodegradable counterparts, and survive more than 100,000 actuation cycles. Furthermore, we build a robotic gripper based on biodegradable soft actuators that is readily compatible with commercial robot arms, encouraging wider use of biodegradable materials systems in soft robotics.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • risk assessment
  • heavy metals
  • human health
  • particulate matter
  • climate change
  • air pollution
  • robot assisted
  • wound healing