Light-steerable locomotion using zero-elastic-energy modes

Light-steerable locomotion using zero-elastic-energy modes

Description

Raw data generated in this study. Driving synthetic materials out of equilibrium via dissipative mechanisms paves the way towards autonomous, self-sustained robotic motions. However, obtaining agile movement in diverse environments with dynamic steerability remains a challenge. Here we report a light-fuelled soft liquid crystal elastomer torus with self-sustained out-of-equilibrium movement. Under constant light excitation, the torus undergoes spontaneous rotation arising from the formation of zero-elastic-energy modes. By exploiting dynamic friction or drag, the zero-elastic-energy-mode-based locomotion direction can be optically controlled in various dry and fluid environments. We demonstrate the ability of the liquid crystal elastomer torus to laterally and vertically swim in the Stokes regime. The torus navigation can be extended to three-dimensional space with full steerability of the swimming direction. These results demonstrate the possibilities enabled by prestrained topological structures towards robotic functions of out-of-equilibrium soft matter.
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Year of publication

2024

Authors

CSC - Publisher

Hao Zeng - Creator

Other information

Fields of science

Mechanical engineering; Materials engineering

Language

English

Open access

Open

License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

Keywords

Physical sciences, FOS: Physical sciences, liquid crystal elastomer, Stokes regime, toroidal swimmer, Fysik, polymeerit, polymerer, robohtat, robotar
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