This Rubbery Robot Can Survive Intense Environments

Blackwell Stith

See You Space Cowboy ...
Jun 28, 2014
144
0
0
This Rubbery Robot Can Survive Intense Environments



Fire, ice, and the weight of a car- this little robot can withstand it all and crawl away.

Michael Tolley and his team from Harvard University [http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2014/09/cutting-the-cord-on-soft-robots/] have created a robot that lacks a rigid exoskeleton. Its squishy casing allows it to survive intense conditions and extreme environments, such as temperatures above boiling and below freezing- even under the wheel of an automobile.

The prototype is longer than previous models, measuring 65 centimeters long. Its larger size allows for an internal battery pack instead of a tether, which the older models required, to power the robot for 2 hours. An electrically powered air compressor system drives its movement in a pneumatic fashion that when coupled with its soft body makes it optimum for navigating tight spaces.

During experiments [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Ww9VtkZ8Pw], Tolley's robot was able to walk through a snowstorm with temperatures reaching 9 degrees below Celcius (16 degrees Fahrenheit). It also withstood flames for 20 seconds, resisted water and acids, and had its limbs driven over by a car- all of which it walked away from. Currently, the machine's electrical components are exposed- but imbedding them inside the robot's soft body would be an easy feat, according to Tolley.

The team's next move is to improve the speed and mobility of the robot. Some ideas they have for achieving this goal is the possibility of adding feet, as well as programming that would allow it to respond to obstacles or navigate towards a goal. Tolley and his colleagues envision the design as a stepping stone for a new generation of malleable robots that can jump, slither and grasp fragile objects.

"The field of soft robotics is now becoming mature enough to show effective applications," says Cecilia Laschi of the Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies [http://www.sssup.it/] in Pisa, Italy. Laschi is currently developing a rubbery robotic octopus that can navigate the sea floor, and is very impressed with Tolley's robot. "This is a good example of how soft robotics can help build very robust devices, with very low risk of damage," she says.

Source: New Scientist [http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn26164-rubbery-robot-battles-flames-snow-and-gets-run-over.html?cmpid=RSS|NSNS|2012-GLOBAL|tech#.VBIeLIBdWwG]

Permalink
 

RicoADF

Welcome back Commander
Jun 2, 2009
3,147
0
0
Sounds like it'd be great as a rescue rover/walker. Send one of these to rescue people in an avalanche/blizzard or someone stuck in a fire.
All of these great possibilities with drones/UAV's and other robots, I for one welcome our new robotic overloards :)

Captcha - "Chocolate Rain" - I'm on a diet captcha, stop tormenting me :p
 

JasonKaotic

New member
Mar 18, 2009
1,444
0
0
"This rubbery robot can survive intense environments".

Oh god.
Oh god oh god oh god.
OH GOD.
 

Thaluikhain

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 16, 2010
19,140
3,882
118
Eh...yeah, doesn't seem that impressive. What's the point of a robot uprising if they are made out of rubber! they should be silver or black metal things with scary animal like features.

JasonKaotic said:
"This rubbery robot can survive intense environments".

Oh god.
Oh god oh god oh god.
OH GOD.
Cannot unread!
 

Glaice

New member
Mar 18, 2013
577
0
0
Something tells me this can be the first step into implementing such robotics into craft to land on Mercury, Venus and various moons of the gas giants.
 

weirdee

Swamp Weather Balloon Gas
Apr 11, 2011
2,634
0
0
This is also a good way to build an army of nearly indestructible robot octopi that can enter buildings through the toilets and travel at 20 mph.

It is also likely that at this scale it would be feasible to 3d print them.
 

Scorpid

New member
Jul 24, 2011
814
0
0
Wow I've not seen an aesthetically more pitiful looking robot. Its a flaby skin colored robot that crawls around like a dieing man but somehow slower than a dieing man could.