A programmable metamaterial finger can lock into four positions without electronics. A simpler, more functional future for ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
OCTOID: Shape-shifting robot that can camouflage, move and even grab like octopus
Last year, a South Korean team, inspired by octopus adaptations, developed a metamaterial-based soft machine capable of ...
Ultrasound-driven artificial muscles with microbubbles present new opportunities for medical and technical applications, ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Smart elastomer muscles give soft robotics record 2,000x lifting capability
The flexible material acts as an “artificial muscle,” enabling robots to move more naturally and safely than traditional ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Liquid crystal inclusions enhance artificial muscles for robots
An international team led by researchers at the University of Waterloo has developed a new material that can be used as ...
A soft robotic system uses liquid crystal elastomers to merge shape shifting, gripping, and color change, demonstrating fully ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
UK teen student builds robot hand that performs equivalent to research models
Sixteen-year-old Jared Lepora created a robotic hand from Lego pieces with near-human precision. A 16-year-old student from ...
An international team led by researchers at the University of Waterloo has developed material that can be flexible ...
AZoRobotics on MSN
3D-Printed Soft Robots Use Magnetic Control to Deliver Drugs and Move Across Complex Terrain
Advanced 3D printing techniques create flexible origami robots with high magnetic responsiveness, paving the way for ...
10 天on MSN
Open-source mobile network for controlling robotic arms could enable remote medical procedures
A new development in affordable, open-source mobile networks that enables near-real-time control of robotic arms could help ...
An international team led by researchers at the University of Waterloo has developed new material that can be used as ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Artificial muscles use ultrasound-activated microbubbles to move
Researchers at ETH Zurich have developed artificial muscles that contain microbubbles and can be controlled with ultrasound.
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