Title: Artificial Muscle
1Artificial Muscle
- Kori Brabham
- Misti Marr
- Andy Smith
- Paul Lee
2Natural vs. Artificial Muscle
- What does a natural muscle do?
- It is a contractile organ.
- It consists of fibers which actuate force and
motion in response to nervous stimulation. - How does it work?
- Muscles contract by the chemo-mechanical action
of the proteins actin and myosin. - Joints of the body are arrayed such that they
comprise muscles which oppose each other.
3Natural vs. Artificial Muscle
- How can we develop replacements for the natural
muscle? - Develop biomimetic actuators.
- Emphasis on implantable technologies (not on the
the forefront now). - What do we have to work with?
- Electrical/pneumatic servos (robotic limbs, late
1940s-present). - New materials.
- Synthetic polymers
- Carbon
4What constitutes a muscle?
- Any system or combination of sub-systems can be
considered a muscle - hydraulic/pneumatic cylinder.
- electromagnetic servo.
- biological muscle tissue.
- In short, anything which accomplishes actuation
under the command of a stimulus. - Muscles primarily exert energy (ATP) to bring
about - motion, acceleration (?v/ ?t or ?2x/ ?t2).
- force application (Fm.a).
5Muscles Revisited
- Muscle cells are highly specialized for
contraction. - ONLY contract and relax
- Abduction and adduction
- Actin and myosin vary in amounts and
configuration, depending on cell function.
6Three types
- Skeletal voluntary and striated
- Cardiac involuntary, striated, and branched
- Smooth involuntary and unstriated
7The Design of Natural Muscle
- Muscles are simply transducers
- They change the chemo-electric signal from nerves
to mechanical energy. - Artificial muscles should be similar in
resilience and in the ability to produce large
actuation strains - http//www.unm.edu/amri/protect/
8Brief Timeline
- 1619 - Descartes postulated that sensory impulses
activated muscle (reflection) - 1780 - Galvani noticed frog muscles would
contract with electrical apparatus
9Brief Timeline (contd)
- 1968 Rubber artificial muscle
- Involved several thread running along a
longitudinal axis - Compressed air is injected
10Brief Timeline (contd)
- 1968 - Model Postural Control
- A biped walking machine is required to maintain
its balance while standing and walking
11Artificial MuscleAn Overview
- Many types of artificial muscle.
- McKibbin muscle actuators
- Inflatable air tubes, delivering large force at a
low frequency. - PAN-chemically stimulated by pH change.
- Electrically Stimulated Tissues
- IPMC
- Solenoids (not presented)
- Piezo-active polymers and ceramics (not presented)
12A Review of Current Technology
13The McKibben Artificial Muscle
14History
- First developed in the 1950's by American
physician Joseph L. McKibben - originally intended to actuate artificial limbs
for amputees - More recently was commercialized in the 1980's by
Bridgestone Rubber Company of Japan - patented and called Rubbertuator
- Presently the Shadow Robot Group of England
manufactures these actuators for robotic
applications
15How its made
- Consists of an internal bladder
- Bladder is covered by a braided mesh shell
- Attached at either end to tendon-like structures
16How it works
- Internal bladder is pressurized
- Bladder expands in a balloon-like manner against
the braided shell - Shell constrains the expansion to maintain a
cylindrical shape - As the volume of the bladder increases due to the
increase in pressure, the actuator shortens and
produces tension
17 Advantages of the McKibben Artificial Muscle
- High force to weight ratio
- Lightweight
- Low Cost
- Smooth
- Size availability
- Flexible
- Powerful
- Damped
- Effective
18Comparison to biological muscle
- Force-length properties are reasonably close
- Force-velocity properties are not close
- a device called a hydraulic damper that operates
in parallel with the McKibben muscles has been
created - McKibben muscles are attached to a spring-like
device that simulates the tendon properties and
energy storage of a real muscle
19Ionic Polymer-Metal Composite
20How its made
- Composed of a perfluorinated ion exchange
membrane - Consist of a polymer matrix that is coated on the
outer surface with platinum in most cases (silver
and copper have also been used) - coating aids in the distribution of the voltage
over surface - Made into sheets that can be cut into different
shapes and sizes as needed
21How it works
- Uses electricity (electrodes, conductors, etc.)
to operate - A circuit is connected to surface to produce
voltage difference, causing bending - Strips can bend and flap dramatically which
allows movement
22Advantages of IPMC
- Light
- Compact
- Driven by low power
- and low voltage
- Large strain capability
23Comparison to biological muscle
- High fracture tolerance
- Large actuation strain
- Inherent vibration damping
- Responds to electricity with elasticity and
responsiveness similar to those shown to
biological muscle
24Nanotube Artificial Muscle
- Invented by Max Plank Institute, produced by
AlliedSignal. - Based on Carbon nanotubes (bucky tubes).
- Sub-microscopic Carbon sheets (formed into tubes)
filled with electrolytes.
25Nanotube Artificial Muscle (contd)
- When a voltage is applied the sheets contract to
do work. - Possible limitation electrically actuated.
- Being investigated by Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA) as bucky paper.
26Polyacrylonitrile (PAN)
- Combination of gel and plastic. Tough.
- Contracts under pH changes.
- Contraction occur in 20 ms to a -20 strain.
- Very similar to human muscle in speed, exceeds
human muscle in max force per cm2 (2x).
27Polyacrylonitrile (PAN) (cont)
- Must be surrounded by solutions in latex tubes.
- Some models have been developed which simulate
muscle movement. - University of NM project.
28Electro-active Muscle Transducers
- Uses compliant electrodes to electrically
stimulate electro-active elastomeric materials. - Produce strains in excess of 100, and pressures
greater that 100 psi. - Spherical joints have been developed based on the
actuator. - Developed by SRI International, Inc.
29Electro-active Muscle Transducers (contd)
- AKA Electrostrictive or dielectric elastomer.
- Exhibit a mechanical strain when subjected to an
electrical field. - Striction capability exceeds piezoelectric
ceramics. - Most common are PMMA-based.
- Produce a positive force/expansion.
- Use tiny robotic muscles.
30A Novel Use for AM
- Smart implants with tiny perforations that
contain a pharmaceutical, plugged by artificial
muscles. - The implant has tiny sensors which sense blood
concentrations of certain chemicals.
31A Novel Use for AM (contd)
- The artificial muscle then will shrink to allow a
drug to pass freely. - When concentrations of the sensed chemical rises
in the blood, the muscle then relaxes to plug the
holes a gain.
32Honorable Mention Replacement Prosthetic Limbs
- Started as passive replacements to fill clothing
or act as support. - Archeological evidence of prostheses in ancient
India and Egypt--Queen Vishpla, Elis. - Infection and blood loss.
- 1600s-1800s
- Great increase in health technology styptic
antibiotics, anesthetics, blood clotting
chemicals. - Prosthetic units were developed with lighter
weight and greater articulation (motion learned
and controlled by amputee). - 1940s-1980s Emphasis on actuation.
- 1980s-Present Emphasis on realism.
33Replacement Prosthetic Limbs (contd)
- Number of Companies that specialize in
prosthesis/orthotics - North Shore Orthotics-Prosthetics, Inc.
- Ohi, SCOPe, many others.
- Limb replacements are actuated
- By other existing muscles directly.
- By EMG generated by nearby existing muscles
- Balance.
34Artificial Muscle
35Types of Robots
- Miniature robots
- Wall climbers
- Exploring rovers
36Miniature Robots
- Submersible bots with plastic muscles
- Ability to someday pick up single cells
- Positive and negative ions shrink and swell the
polymer
37Wall Climbers
- Air Rubbertuator
- Capable of difficult inspections
- Aircraft
- Bridges
- Nuclear power plants
- Obstacles, inclines, stairs, vertical movement.
38Robots in Space
- Ability to probe, dig, photograph and analyze
- No gears or complex mechanical systems
- Lighter and less complex robots
- Smaller
- Not sensitive to dust
39Capabilties
- Grasping
- Wiping
- Muscle groups working together
40Grasping
- Electric charge applied to plastic ribon
- Charged particles pushed to one side lengthens
that side
41Wipers
- Two-way wiping motion produced
- Applications onto cameras or sensors
42Muscles Working Together
- Creates more than one motion
- Bionic men and women???
- Could replace human muscles
43Legs and Wheels
- Able to handle most terrain
- Durable
- Reliable
- Not as good as four legs
44A Way of the Future
- Cheap
- Durable
- Lightweight
- Conserve Power
45References
- Electroactive Polymer Actuators webpage
- Artificial Muscle Research Institute
- SRI International, Inc.
- Opthalmatronix, Inc.
- Ohio State University
- www.spacedaily.com
- Max Planck Society
- University of New Mexico -- cape.uwaterloo.ca
- BBC News
- Science Daily
- Discovery Channel