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четверг, 19 мая 2016 г.

Octopus-like skin has light touch


Inspired by the octopus’s ability to change color and shape at will, researchers have created a hydrogel ‘skin’ that can emit light and sense pressure even when stretched [C. Larson et al., Science 351 (2016) 1071].
Soft robotic systems based on electromechanochemically responsive films and organic or polymeric light-emitting devices with stretchable indium tin oxide, graphene, carbon nanotube or metal nanoparticle or nanowire electrodes are currently being explored. But now researchers from Cornell University and the Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia in Italy have come up with a different approach.
The team have developed a new highly luminescent stretchable skin based on a hyperelastic light-emitting capacitor (HLEC) that is twice as stretchy as previously demonstrated display materials and can withstand stains of over 600%. The material is composed of layers of highly elastic ionic hydrogel electrodes and dielectric silicone embedded with electroluminescent ZnS phosphor powders. The ZnS particles are doped with elements that emit light of different colors under a high electric field. Low and high concentrations of Cu dopant produce green and blue, respectively, while Mn produces yellow light. Used in combination, a mixture of dopants can also generate white light.
The stretchable material can also sense pressure—since changes in electrode area and separation distance affect the capacitance. For example, as the material is stretched the capacitance increases.
‘‘We have used this material system to make a grid of pixels and applied it to the skin of a soft robot to enable feedback control and visual communication,’’ explains researcher Bryan Peele of Cornell.
The team created a small ‘crawling’ robot from the material, which can wriggle along by inflating and deflating small chambers, while emitting light from the top surface. All of the materials making up the stretchy external skin can be processed in the liquid state, with each layer cast in a 3D printed mold and then cured either in an oven (for the silicone) or under UV illumination (for the hydrogel).
‘‘We have only shown planar applications of our system,’’ says Peele. ‘‘But the same materials and technique could be used to cast stretchable displays into a wide variety of 3D structures such spheres or more organic shapes that conform to the human body.’’
One of the most intriguing potential applications is stretchable electronics such as a cell phone that fits into the pocket but can be stretched to the size of a large tablet when desired.
‘‘The display material is not very sensitive to stretching, which may make it suitable for displaying information without being affected by strain,’’ comments Zhenan Bao of Stanford University.
"The work is an impressive advance in materials science and mechanics," adds John A. Rogers of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. ‘‘This type of technology could be important not only as soft skins for robots, but also as indicatorlighting on thin, skin-like electronic systems that are rapidly emerging as next generation wearables,’’ he says.

This article was originally published in Nano Today (2016), doi: 10.1016/j.nantod.2016.03.001

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