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Wirelessly Actuated Thermo‐ and Magneto‐Responsive Soft Bimorph Materials with Programmable Shape‐Morphing
Author(s) -
Zhang Jiachen,
Guo Yubing,
Hu Wenqi,
Sitti Metin
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
advanced materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.707
H-Index - 527
eISSN - 1521-4095
pISSN - 0935-9648
DOI - 10.1002/adma.202100336
Subject(s) - morphing , soft robotics , materials science , smart material , actuator , bimorph , 3d printing , fabrication , shape memory alloy , computer science , nanotechnology , mechanical engineering , artificial intelligence , engineering , composite material , metallurgy , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology
Soft materials that respond to wireless external stimuli are referred to as “smart” materials due to their promising potential in real‐world actuation and sensing applications in robotics, microfluidics, and bioengineering. Recent years have witnessed a burst of these stimuli‐responsive materials and their preliminary applications. However, their further advancement demands more versatility, configurability, and adaptability to deliver their promised benefits. Here, a dual‐stimuli‐responsive soft bimorph material with three configurations that enable complex programmable 3D shape‐morphing is presented. The material consists of liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs) and magnetic‐responsive elastomers (MREs) via facile fabrication that orthogonally integrates their respective stimuli‐responsiveness without detrimentally altering their properties. The material offers an unprecedented wide design space and abundant degree‐of‐freedoms (DoFs) due to the LCE's programmable director field, the MRE's programmable magnetization profile, and diverse geometric configurations. It responds to wireless stimuli of the controlled magnetic field and environmental temperature. Its dual‐responsiveness allows the independent control of different DoFs for complex shape‐morphing behaviors with anisotropic material properties. A diverse set of in situ reconfigurable shape‐morphing and an environment‐aware untethered miniature 12‐legged robot capable of locomotion and self‐gripping are demonstrated. Such material can provide solutions for the development of future soft robotic and other functional devices.