Thermally-activated locomotion of a bilayer polymer actuator
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In: Smart Materials in Manufacturing, Vol. 2.2024, 100047, 24.02.2024.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Thermally-activated locomotion of a bilayer polymer actuator
AU - Fedoryak, Alexander N.
AU - Doroshenko, T. P.
AU - Golenkov, O. G.
AU - Kratzer, Markus
AU - Huszar, Michael
AU - Plevová, Kateřina
AU - Haiden, Lukas
AU - Teichert, Karl Christian
AU - Dimitriev, Oleg P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/2/24
Y1 - 2024/2/24
N2 - The development of smart actuators based on renewable or biocompatible materials, which are able for delivery of specific cargo is of great importance in robotics, medical and material science engineering, food industry, etc. Here, we report the original design of a bilayer polymer actuator consisting of two polymer materials with an interface adhesive layer between them, able for macroscopic locomotion step by step on a special ratchet substrate through repetitive bending and straightening. This was triggered by heat alternation due to incandescent lamp radiation on/off switching, with a rapid reaction time of the actuator to heat exposure of the order of few seconds. Specifically, a relatively fast locomotion of the actuator was achieved due to the large amplitude of its reversible bending deformation of up to ∼40% measured in terms of the actuator's elevation-to-length ratio. As a result, a typical actuator demonstrated the locomotion velocity of about 3 cm/min, where each cycle of contraction/expansion yielded a walking step of ∼1 cm for about 20 s. It was demonstrated that the actuator, while moving, is able to carry a cargo almost twice heavier than the mass of the carrier itself. Based on optical microscopy and atomic force - infrared spectroscopy data it was concluded that the adhesive interface layer plays an important role in the stable operation of the actuator as it retards linear expansion of the rear polymer layer and thus assists conversion of different linear expansion of the adjacent layers into their effective bending.
AB - The development of smart actuators based on renewable or biocompatible materials, which are able for delivery of specific cargo is of great importance in robotics, medical and material science engineering, food industry, etc. Here, we report the original design of a bilayer polymer actuator consisting of two polymer materials with an interface adhesive layer between them, able for macroscopic locomotion step by step on a special ratchet substrate through repetitive bending and straightening. This was triggered by heat alternation due to incandescent lamp radiation on/off switching, with a rapid reaction time of the actuator to heat exposure of the order of few seconds. Specifically, a relatively fast locomotion of the actuator was achieved due to the large amplitude of its reversible bending deformation of up to ∼40% measured in terms of the actuator's elevation-to-length ratio. As a result, a typical actuator demonstrated the locomotion velocity of about 3 cm/min, where each cycle of contraction/expansion yielded a walking step of ∼1 cm for about 20 s. It was demonstrated that the actuator, while moving, is able to carry a cargo almost twice heavier than the mass of the carrier itself. Based on optical microscopy and atomic force - infrared spectroscopy data it was concluded that the adhesive interface layer plays an important role in the stable operation of the actuator as it retards linear expansion of the rear polymer layer and thus assists conversion of different linear expansion of the adjacent layers into their effective bending.
KW - Cargo transfer
KW - Deformation
KW - Heat exposure
KW - Locomotion
KW - Polymer actuator
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85200882044&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.smmf.2024.100047
DO - 10.1016/j.smmf.2024.100047
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85200882044
VL - 2.2024
JO - Smart Materials in Manufacturing
JF - Smart Materials in Manufacturing
M1 - 100047
ER -