Self-Healing Artificial Muscles 90
Valor1016 writes "Researchers in California have developed an artificial muscle that heals itself and generates electricity. 'We've made an artificial muscle that, when you apply electricity to it, it expands, more than 200 percent, the motion and energy is a lot like human muscles,' said Qibing Pei, a scientist at UCLA and study author. The researchers used flexible carbon nanotubes as electrodes. If an area of the carbon nanotube fails, the region around it seals itself by becoming non-conductive and prevents the damage from spreading to other areas. This material also conserves about 70% of the energy you put into it. As the material contracts after an expansion the rearranging of the carbon nanotubes generates a small electric current that can be captured and used to power another expansion or stored in a battery. The research appeared in the January issue of Advanced Materials."
NOT Healing (Score:5, Insightful)
Typically, "healing" refers to repair of damage, not isolation of damage.
Re:NOT Healing (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:NOT Healing (Score:5, Funny)
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Also, it seems to me they are pumping in too much energy, if they are getting 70% back when it contracts.
I'm pretty sure our muscles don't work that way, alhough our bodies do give off substantial heat loses, and that may be one cause. It would seem to me they could better conserve energy by looking for the minimum energy required to get the sufficient expansion, thus negatin
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Ok, you get started with the giant robot, and I'll get to work on the nanobots.
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So what the artificial muscle needs is a means to add new *tissue* and a means to evacuate dead *tissue*
I can see a method similar to what insects use for their carapace as a viable way to do this... but that's a whole new challenge.
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Re:Better than the real thing (Score:4, Insightful)
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2) Well, that's why they're figuring out better production methods.
3) Er, biological muscles do need electricity too. Nervous system? Sodium-Potassium exchange?
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Tell that to the cyborgs who will kick sand in your face at the beach in 10 years.
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Question (Score:5, Insightful)
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The power stroke for a biological muscle is the contraction. While these "muscles" are interesting and could have many uses, powering limbs is not likely to be one in their current configuration.
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Re:Question (Score:4, Insightful)
In order to be biologically uselfull they will need to be pliant and flexible. If they are pliant and flexible they won't have the tensile strength to move bones around.
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I remember when i thought (because that's the way i was taught) muscles 'worked' through contraction. I could maybe do a handstand for 5 secs. Now, through expansion, i can stand on my hands for minutes.
Check out the angle on the arms of gymnasts doing handstands.
It's just like the idea that western scientists have that walking
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I have an application (Score:5, Funny)
Well, I see great applications in artificial penises. Much better than the pump ones!
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I get email about this all the time (Score:1)
Nanotechnology is very interesting. (Score:2)
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To get nano scale replicators you would get an extremly complex molecule/molecule system and at the same time to manipulate it on an atom scale you would need very high energy concentrations.
One thing we know from biochem is that very large molecules (like DNA, proteins etc) don't last long in high energy environments.
Nanotech replicators will requier very controlled environments and very high energy working medium to function. Outside of thoes controlled con
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Look at how much space solar needs to power an average home...
The world is extremely messy and active nanotech like would be necessary for the "Gray Goo" scenario are going to be very fragile.
Only in a highly controlled environment will they be practicle.
Re:Nanotechnology is very interesting. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Technology is hardly as resilient as nature, which will adapt and contain if not wipe grey goo off the planet. Just give it time
Obviously we hardly will be the tool of nature in this; nor will the gray goo or the "natural response" care of what could happen to us in the mean time. (read: wiped out
I am very skeptical of grey goo so I liked your angle and fell for it for a couple of secs. But really, should grey goo arise, only cockroaches and anything simpler have a chance to survive.
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Unless by "grey goo" you mean "nanomachines that can magically find sources of food an energy millions of times more abundant than those available to similar, naturally-ev
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Well... Here comes a whole new round of PENIS (Score:3, Insightful)
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If you get them ANGRY... (Score:3, Funny)
Amazing! (Score:3, Insightful)
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Self healing? (Score:5, Informative)
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Mods - Look at GP^ (Score:2)
Re:Self healing? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Self healing? (Score:5, Informative)
Not too shabby for the amount of energy in a "Double Whopper" meal (with cheese) from Burger King.
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Artificial muscles (Score:1)
TFA doesn't mention size, that I saw, but if you can cause non-negligible damage with a pin, I'm guessing the mecha would have to be measured in mm or cm rather than meters...
Contraction speed (Score:3, Interesting)
Reversibility, flexibility, bio-compatibility, and tensile strength are also important considerations. When the article is published in Advanced Materials, I'm actually going to read it to find out.
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Nanosuit? (Score:1)
BAD pun, BAD! (Score:3, Funny)
Artificial muscles have been around for years but have essentially hamstrung themselves. Some artificial muscles get so big they tear, developing uneven film thickness and random particles that cause muscle failure.
Grooooooan. I guess I'm dating myself, but I remember when the Discovery Channel had something to do with "science".
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Healing Muscles? (Score:1)
Personally... (Score:2)
Ah'll be bahck (Score:3, Funny)
A new wave of spam is sure to follow ... (Score:1)
W4NT T0 EXTEND YOUR LOV3 LIFE?
ORD3R NOW!
Just in time for season 4 (Score:1)
They Rebelled.
They Evolved.
There are many copies.
And they have a Plan.
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Arms. (Score:1)
Another expansion (Score:3, Interesting)
The other expansion should not be of the same muscle, of course; alternate between two opposing muscles and you can get a very efficient walking motion going.
(I said "walking," dammit, not "wanking!")
All of the posts complaining that "muscles should contract, not expand" -- hey, it's not that hard to use an expansion to create a useful pulling force. Wrap an elastic sleeve around it that will get shorter as it gets rounder, and mechanically it will work very much like a muscle.
Electric flags (Score:1)
Imagine flags that generate electricity just by flapping in the wind. Every electric car could have a few, same with ships. Wind farms would be fields of flags instead of propellers, much more space-efficient. Sounds wonderful.
Pull a hatch off a Tank? (Score:1)
I can build my Mad Cat now.. (Score:1)
Lesse.. only thing left is a Mini-Fusion plant.. and then I will have all the Mechs I want.
Next item on agenda: Change name to Nicolas Kerensky
However u slice it... (Score:1)