Tech Xplore on MSN
Robots you can wear like clothes: Automatic weaving of 'fabric muscle' brings commercialization closer
The commercialization of clothing-type wearable robots has taken a significant step forward with the development of equipment ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Fabric muscles thinner than hair could reshape wearable robotics design
Researchers from the Advanced Robotics Research Center at the Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials (KIMM) have built an automated weaving system that continuously produces ultra-thin, shape ...
Researchers have unveiled a novel class of AI-enhanced artificial muscles built from bio-inspired, lifelike materials.
We've been hearing a lot about "artificial muscles," which allow robotic devices or prosthetic limbs to perform human-like motions. And while most of them have been produced in labs utilizing ...
Electroactive polymer actuators represent a rapidly evolving field in materials science, where electrically induced deformations in polymers are harnessed to produce controlled mechanical motion.
The next generation of soft robots might be folding and sliding as effortlessly as living tissue, say a team of engineers who ...
The commercialization of clothing-type wearable robots has taken a significant step forward with the development of equipment that can continuously ...
Swedish researchers have developed a breakthrough 3D printing method to create soft actuators. These dielectric elastic actuators (DEA) are made from silicone-based materials, combining conductive ...
MIT engineers have developed a new spring (shown in Petri dish) that maximizes the work of natural muscles. When living muscle tissue is attached to posts at the corners of the device, the muscle’s ...
Researchers have created a new type of fiber that can perform like a muscle actuator, in many ways better than other options that exist today. And, most importantly, these muscle-like fibers are ...
The model and controllers will add new knowledge for the use of the twisted and coiled polymer muscle in mechatronic system. The main contribution of “Control of TCP muscles using Takagi–Sugeno–Kang ...
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