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Cited 13 time in webofscience Cited 18 time in scopus
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High-performance electrified hydrogel actuators based on wrinkled nanomembrane electrodes for untethered insect-scale soft aquabots

Authors
Ko, JongkukKim, ChanghwanKim, DongjinSong, YongkwonLee, SeokminYeom, BongjunHuh, JuneHan, SeungyongKang, DaeshikKoh, Je-SungCho, Jinhan
Issue Date
Oct-2022
Publisher
AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
Citation
SCIENCE ROBOTICS, v.7, no.71
Journal Title
SCIENCE ROBOTICS
Volume
7
Number
71
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/87547
DOI
10.1126/scirobotics.abo6463
ISSN
2470-9476
Abstract
Hydrogels have diverse chemical properties and can exhibit reversibly large mechanical deformations in re-sponse to external stimuli; these characteristics suggest that hydrogels are promising materials for soft robots. However, reported actuators based on hydrogels generally suffer from slow response speed and/or poor controllability due to intrinsic material limitations and electrode fabrication technologies. Here, we report a hydrogel actuator that operates at low voltages (<3 volts) with high performance (strain > 50%, energy density > 7 x 105 joules per cubic meter, and power density > 3 x 104 watts per cubic meter), surpassing existing hydrogel actuators and other types of electroactive soft actuators. The enhanced performance of our actuator is due to the formation of wrinkled nanomembrane electrodes that exhibit high conductivity and ex-cellent mechanical deformation through capillary-assisted assembly of metal nanoparticles and deswelling-induced wrinkled structures. By applying an electric potential through the wrinkled nanomembrane electrodes that sandwich the hydrogel, we were able to trigger a reversible and substantial electroosmotic water flow inside a hydrogel film, which drove the controlled swelling of the hydrogel. The high energy efficiency and power density of our wrinkled nanomembrane electrode-induced actuator enabled the fabrication of an un-tethered insect-scale aquabot integrated with an on-board control unit demonstrating maneuverability with fast locomotion speed (1.02 body length per second), which occupies only 2% of the total mass of the robot.
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