Semiordered Hierarchical Metallic Network for Fast and Large Charge-Induced Strain

Nano Lett. 2017 Aug 9;17(8):4774-4780. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b01526. Epub 2017 Jul 27.

Abstract

Nanoporous metallic actuators for artificial muscle applications are distinguished by combining the low operating voltage, which is otherwise reserved for polymer-based actuators with interesting values of strain amplitude, strength, and stiffness that are comparable of those of piezoceramics. We report a nanoporous metal actuator with enhanced strain amplitude and accelerated switching. Our 3D macroscopic metallic muscle has semiordered and hierarchical nanoporous structure, in which μm-sized tubes align perpendicular with the sample surface, while nm-sized ligaments consist of the tube walls. This nanoarchitecture combines channels for fast ion transportation with large surface area for charge storage and strain generation. The result is a record reversible strain amplitude of 1.59% with a strain rate of 8.83 × 10-6 s-1 in the field of metallic based actuators. A passive hydroxide layer is self-grown on the metal surface, which not only contributes a supercapacitive layer, but also stabilizes the nanoporous structure against coarsening, which guarantees sustainable actuation beyond ten-thousand cycles.

Keywords: Artificial muscle; charge-induced strain; electrochemical actuation; hierarchical nanoporous structure; nanoporous metal.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't