May 4, 2018

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Motorizing fibres with geometric zero-energy modes

With the wheel within, the researchers hit upon an extremely simple principle to set polymer materia into spontaneous motion. Credit: Falko Ziebert (263)
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With the wheel within, the researchers hit upon an extremely simple principle to set polymer materia into spontaneous motion. Credit: Falko Ziebert (263)

Physicists and material scientists have succeeded in constructing a motor and an energy storage device from one single component. They used an elastic polymer fibre closed into a ring that was made to rotate on application of an external energy supply. The researchers from the universities in Heidelberg and Strasbourg (France) hope that this mechanism will spur the development of intelligent materials with precisely defined functions. The findings were published in the journal Nature Materials.

"Our approach is minimalistic. We don't rely on complex, high-tech but instead ask ourselves how the geometry and topology of a piece of material can elicit an intelligent function, such as rotation. That's how our within came about," reports Dr. Falko Ziebert of the Institute for Theoretical Physics at Heidelberg University, who co-directed the research with Dr. Igor Kulić of the Institut Charles Sadron of the University of Strasbourg. Unlike a traditional rigid wheel that travels around an axle, an elastic deformation wave forms in this wheel within, causing it to move. "Simple heat flow generates the propulsion by causing thermal expansion in the material, much like the thermal convection in our atmosphere that determines our weather and climate. This thermal deformation interacts with the prescribed deformation of the ring geometry and elicits the rotation," explains Dr. Ziebert.

With the wheel within, the researchers hit upon an extremely simple principle to set polymer materials, like a nylon thread or a rubber band, into spontaneous motion. This principle will be the basis for further research. "Right now we are still playing with different geometries, materials, and other forms of energy flow through the system," states Dr. Kulić. One vision is to develop new technical devices with robust, self-propelled elements, in the form of artificial muscles, for instance.

More information: Arthur Baumann et al. Motorizing fibres with geometric zero-energy modes, Nature Materials (2018). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-018-0062-0

Journal information: Nature Materials

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