Tetherless and Batteryless Soft Navigators and Grippers

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2024 Mar 20;16(11):14345-14356. doi: 10.1021/acsami.4c00354. Epub 2024 Mar 5.

Abstract

Remotely controllable soft actuators have promising potential applications in many fields including soft robotics, exploration, and invasion medical treatment. Shape memory polymers could store and release energy, resulting in shape deformation, and have been regarded as promising candidates to fabricate untethered soft robots. Herein, an untethered and battery-free soft navigator and gripper based on a shape memory hydrogel is presented. The shape memory hydrogel is obtained through hydrogen bonding between gelatin and tannic acid, and the hydrogel displays excellent shape memory properties on the basis of hydrogen bonding and the coil-triple helix transition of gelatin. Moreover, Fe3O4 nanoparticles are introduced to endow the hydrogel magnetic responsiveness and photothermal conversion capacity. Finally, the shape memory hydrogel in a stretched state is assembled with an inert hydrogel to achieve a bilayer hydrogel actuator, which could produce complex shape transformation due to the shape recovery of the shape memory layer induced by heat or light. Taking advantage of the magnetically control and light-responsive shape deformation, remotely controllable soft grippers that could navigate through tortuous paths and grasp objects from a hard-to-reach place have been accomplished. This approach will inspire the design and fabrication of novel shape memory hydrogels as remotely controllable soft robots.

Keywords: magnetic navigation; photothermal conversion; shape memory hydrogels; soft actuators; untethered.