Title: ARTIFICIAL MUSCLE (with emphasis on Electroactive Polymers)
1ARTIFICIAL MUSCLE(with emphasis on Electroactive
Polymers)
- By
- Bharath Ramaswamy
- Department of Electrical Computer Engineering
- Utah State University
ECE 5320 Mechatronics
2Introduction
- Artificial Muscles are synthetic materials that
behave like biological muscles. - Active materials have shown to behave
macroscopically similar to some of the processes
taking place in biological muscle fibers. - Artificial muscles are made up of materials which
dramatically swell and shrink under chemical
and/or electrical stimuli. - Eventually, artificial muscles can be "packaged
into virtually any shape or size and muscle for
use in human applications could become a reality.
Ref http//mmadou.eng.uci.edu/ResearchDevelopment
/ArtificialMuscle.htm
3Artificial vs. Natural muscle
- Artificial actuators cannot and should not be
exactly like natural muscle in all aspects. - power source
- environmental conditions
- materials and microstructure
- response to stimulation
- Fatigue
- Actuators should reproduce only those
characteristics of muscle that are beneficial for
the application.
Ref http//bees.jpl.nasa.gov/BEES2000/BEES-Flex.p
df
4Basic Principle
- Bundles of fibers made from polymer gels would
shrink when immersed in acidic solution, then
swell significantly with addition of a base to
the immersion solution. - Immersed in acid solution, negative ions of the
polymer were attracted to positive ions from the
acid that permeated the gel, which resulted in
contraction. - Immersed in alkaline solution, the gel's negative
ions were repulsed by negative ions from the
solution, causing the polymer to expand. - The mechanical effect was similar to the action
of natural muscle tissue. - In addition to exposing polymer gels to specific
solutions to cause them to flex and contract,
passing an electric current through a material
can induce a similar effect.
Ref http//www.devicelink.com/mddi/archive/99/08/
004.html
5Enhancing Polymer Response
- Electron bombardment enhances polymer response by
altering the materials molecular conformation and
created new chemical bonds. - It inserts defects into the material, making it
more compliant and flexible. The process also
increases the material's dielectric constant. - By infusing polymer gel with electrorheological
fluid (ERF), which stiffens to a solid in
response to an electric field the polymers
response time to electric impulses was quickened
from 3 seconds to 100 milliseconds.
Ref http//www.devicelink.com/mddi/archive/99/08/
004.html
6Increasing Strength
- Fibers heated to 4500F to form cross-links and
boiled in sodium hydroxide to make them elastic.
This process binds the fiber within a gelatinous
mass. The mass is then encapsulated in latex and
bathed in water. The ionic-polymer fibers,
encased within the latex shield, are bathed in a
chemical solution and contract or expand in
response to changes in the solution's pH. - Adding sodium hydroxide or another base causes
the fibers to stretch to as much as twice their
original length. Acid results in the fibers
contracting nearly as fast as human muscles and
with twice the strength. - Use of computer-controlled pumps that regulate
the flow of acid and base into the muscle make it
possible to regulate and program the muscle's
activity.
Ref http//www.devicelink.com/mddi/archive/99/08/
004.html
7Important Actuator Characteristics
- Energy (the most fundamental)
- Energy density
- Energy efficiency
- Speed of response
- Force vs. Stroke
- Environmental Tolerance
- Power Supply Requirements
- Reliability and Robustness
- Passive or open-loop characteristics
- Elasticity
- Energy absorption motor and a brake
- Perturbation response preflex
- Back-drivability
Ref http//bees.jpl.nasa.gov/BEES2000/BEES-Flex.p
df
8Requirements of Material
- High dielectric constant, or ability to resist
the flow of electric charge - Elasticity and Non-linear behavior
- Large Displacement Response
- Low Density
- Large Strain Capability
9Terminology
- Electrostriction - the non-linear reaction of
ferroelectric EAP - EAP - general term describing polymers that
respond to electrical stimulation - Electronic EAP - polymer that change shape or
dimensions due to migration of electrons in
response to electric field (usually dry) - Ionic EAP - polymer that change shape or
dimensions due to migration of ions in response
to electric field (usually wet and contains
electrolyte) - Longitudinal EAP - polymer that responds with
change in length - Bending EAP - polymer that responds with bending
Ref http//ndeaa.jpl.nasa.gov/nasa-nde/lommas/eap
/EAP-web.htm
10Materials
- Ionic polymer-Metal Composites (IPMC)
- Shape Memory Alloys (SMA)
- Electroactive Ceramics (EAC)
- Electroactive Polymers (EAP)
- Rubber
- Carbon Nanotubes
-
Ref http//www.unm.edu/amri/paper.html
11Materials (contd.)
- Ionic EAP
- Ionic Gels (IGL)
- Ionic Polymer-Metal Composites (IPMC)
- Conductive Polymers (CP)
- Electrorheological fluids (ERF)
- Electronic EAP
- Ferroelectric polymers
- Dielectric EAP or ESSP
- Electrostrictive Graft Elastomers
- Liquid Crystal Elastomers
Ref http//kasml.konkuk.ac.kr/image/Artificial20
Muscle.ppt
12Comparison of Properties
http//ndeaa.jpl.nasa.gov/nasa-nde/lommas/eap/spie
-eap.html
13Electroactive Polymer ArtificialMuscle (EPAM)
- Electroactive polymers are plastics that expand
or contract in the presence of an electric field.
Ref http//bees.jpl.nasa.gov/BEES2000/BEES-Flex.p
df
14Basic components of an EAP-driven system
Ref ndeaa.jpl.nasa.gov/ndeaa-pub/NSMMS/EAP-NSMMS-
2000.pdf
15Muscle vs. Artificial Muscle
Ref http//bees.jpl.nasa.gov/BEES2000/BEES-Flex.p
df
16Muscle vs. Artificial Muscle
Ref http//bees.jpl.nasa.gov/BEES2000/BEES-Flex.p
df
17Sources of Excitation
- Pneumatic (ex. McKibben muscle actuators)
- Hydraulic (Electrorhological fluids)
- Heat (Shape Memory Alloys)
- Chemical
- Electrical
18Challenges to EAP
- Force actuation and mechanical energy density of
EAPs are relatively low limiting the potential
applications - Low Response
- High Voltages required for Actuation
- No effective and robust EAP material is currently
available commercially. - No established database that documents the
properties of the existing EAP materials.
19EAP Infrastructure Areas needing attention
Ref http//ndeaa.jpl.nasa.gov/ndeaa-pub/EAP/EAP-r
obotics-2000.pdf
20A note on Carbon Nanotubes
- Described as an extended buckminsterfullerene
molecule, or "buckyball," the spherical molecule
constructed solely from 60 carbon atoms. - Composed entirely of carbon atoms and, because of
their molecule structure, provide exceptional
strength. - Provide higher work densities per cycle
- Energy needed for the nanotube actuator is a full
order of magnitude lower than that of polymer gel
Ref http//www.devicelink.com/mddi/archive/99/08/
004.html
21Applications
- Balloon used to cushion the deployment of the
Mars Pathfinder - Inflatable telescopes
- Biomimetic robots - highly maneuverable,
noiseless and agile, with various shapes to
emulate capabilities of terrestrial creatures
with integrated multidisciplinary capabilities
like soft-landing, hopping, digging and operating
cooperatively. - Prosthetic Limbs
- Artificial sphincters for treatment of
incontinence - Method for encasing the heart with synthetic
muscle in lieu of transplant procedures
22References
- SRI International
- http//bees.jpl.nasa.gov/BEES2000/BEES-Flex.pdf
- Konkuk University, Artificial Structures
Materials lab - http//kasml.konkuk.ac.kr/image/Artificial20Muscl
e.ppt - Ionic Polymer-Metal Composites (IPMC) As
Biomimetic Sensors, Actuators Artificial
Muscles - A Review, M. Shahinpoor(a), Y.
Bar-Cohen(b), J.O. Simpson(c) and J. Smith - http//www.unm.edu/amri/paper.html
- Electroactive Polymers (EAP) Low Mass Muscle
Actuators, Y. Bar-Cohena, T. Xuea, B. Joffea,
S.-S. Liha, M. Shahinpoorb, J. Simpsonc, J.
Smithc, and P. Willisa - Electroactive Polymers As Artificial Muscles -
Capabilities, Potentials And Challenges, Yoseph
Bar-Cohen1 - http//ndeaa.jpl.nasa.gov/ndeaa-pub/EAP/EAP-roboti
cs-2000.pdf