Stretchable pumps for soft machines.

Journal: Nature
Published Date:

Abstract

Machines made of soft materials bridge life sciences and engineering. Advances in soft materials have led to skin-like sensors and muscle-like actuators for soft robots and wearable devices. Flexible or stretchable counterparts of most key mechatronic components have been developed, principally using fluidically driven systems; other reported mechanisms include electrostatic, stimuli-responsive gels and thermally responsive materials such as liquid metals and shape-memory polymers. Despite the widespread use of fluidic actuation, there have been few soft counterparts of pumps or compressors, limiting the portability and autonomy of soft machines. Here we describe a class of soft-matter bidirectional pumps based on charge-injection electrohydrodynamics. These solid-state pumps are flexible, stretchable, modular, scalable, quiet and rapid. By integrating the pump into a glove, we demonstrate wearable active thermal management. Embedding the pump in an inflatable structure produces a self-contained fluidic 'muscle'. The stretchable pumps have potential uses in wearable laboratory-on-a-chip and microfluidic sensors, thermally active clothing and autonomous soft robots.

Authors

  • Vito Cacucciolo
    2 Institute of Microengineering Neuchâtel Campus , School of Engineering, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Neuchâtel, Switzerland .
  • Jun Shintake
    Institute of Microengineering Neuchâtel Campus, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Rue de la Maladière 71b, CH-2000, Neuchâtel, Switzerland.
  • Yu Kuwajima
    Smart Materials Laboratory, Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics, Shibaura Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan.
  • Shingo Maeda
    Smart Materials Laboratory, Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics, Shibaura Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan.
  • Dario Floreano
  • Herbert Shea
    Institute of Microengineering Neuchâtel Campus, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Rue de la Maladière 71b, CH-2000, Neuchâtel, Switzerland.