TY - JOUR
T1 - Graphene Oxide-Enabled Synthesis of Metal Oxide Origamis for Soft Robotics
AU - Yang, Haitao
AU - Yeow, Bok Seng
AU - Chang, Ting Hsiang
AU - Li, Kerui
AU - Fu, Fanfan
AU - Ren, Hongliang
AU - Chen, Po Yen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2019/5/28
Y1 - 2019/5/28
N2 - Origami structures have been widely applied in various technologies especially in the fields of soft robotics. Metal oxides (MOs) have recently emerged as unconventional backbone materials for constructing complex origamis with distinct functionalities. However, the MO origami structures reported in the literature were rigid and not deformable, thus limiting their applications to soft robotics. Herein, we reported a graphene oxide (GO)-enabled templating synthesis to produce complex MO origami structures from their paper origami templates with high structural replication. The MO origami structures were next stabilized with elastomer, and the MO-elastomer origamis were able to be adapted into multiple actuation systems (including magnetic fields, shape-memory alloys, and pneumatics) for the fabrication of MO origami robots. Compared with conventional paper origami robots, the MO robots were lightweight, mechanically compliant, fire-retardant, magnetic responsive, and power efficient. We further demonstrated the legendary phoenix-fire-reborn concept in the soft robotics fields: a paper origami robot sacrificed itself in a fire scene and transformed itself into a downsized Al2O3 robot; the Al2O3 robot was able to crawl through a narrow tunnel where the original paper robot was unfit. These MO reconfigurable origamis provide an expanded material library for building soft robotics, and the functionalities of MO robots can be systematically engineered via the intercalation of various metal ions during the GO-enabled synthesis.
AB - Origami structures have been widely applied in various technologies especially in the fields of soft robotics. Metal oxides (MOs) have recently emerged as unconventional backbone materials for constructing complex origamis with distinct functionalities. However, the MO origami structures reported in the literature were rigid and not deformable, thus limiting their applications to soft robotics. Herein, we reported a graphene oxide (GO)-enabled templating synthesis to produce complex MO origami structures from their paper origami templates with high structural replication. The MO origami structures were next stabilized with elastomer, and the MO-elastomer origamis were able to be adapted into multiple actuation systems (including magnetic fields, shape-memory alloys, and pneumatics) for the fabrication of MO origami robots. Compared with conventional paper origami robots, the MO robots were lightweight, mechanically compliant, fire-retardant, magnetic responsive, and power efficient. We further demonstrated the legendary phoenix-fire-reborn concept in the soft robotics fields: a paper origami robot sacrificed itself in a fire scene and transformed itself into a downsized Al2O3 robot; the Al2O3 robot was able to crawl through a narrow tunnel where the original paper robot was unfit. These MO reconfigurable origamis provide an expanded material library for building soft robotics, and the functionalities of MO robots can be systematically engineered via the intercalation of various metal ions during the GO-enabled synthesis.
KW - graphene oxide templating
KW - metal oxide origamis
KW - multifunctional robotic backbones
KW - reconfigurable metamaterials
KW - soft robotics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85063633216&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsnano.9b00144
DO - 10.1021/acsnano.9b00144
M3 - 文章
C2 - 30896919
AN - SCOPUS:85063633216
SN - 1936-0851
VL - 13
SP - 5410
EP - 5420
JO - ACS Nano
JF - ACS Nano
IS - 5
ER -