Scientists develop robotic jellyfish powered by seawater
31 Mar, Daily Telegraph
Scientists are developing a robotic jellyfish which uses the
limitless energy of sea water to power its movement, according to US
Navy-backed research published on Wednesday.
"Robojelly" mimicks the action of the jellyfish, which uses a
circular muscle to open out a bell-like body and then sharply close it,
which expels water and moves the creature forward.
The robot's body is made of eight segments made of shape-metal alloy
- metals that remember their original shape after being scrunched
up.They are coated with a platinum black powder, which reacts with the
oxygen and hydrogen components of sea water to create heat.The heat
travels to the robot's artificial muscles, causing the eight bell
segments to contract and thus eject the water. After contraction, the
segments relax and regain their original shape.
"To our knowledge this is the first successful powering of an
underwater robot using external hydrogen as a fuel source," said Yonas
Tadesse, an Ethiopian-born mechanical engineer at Virginia Tech.
Still in the lab phase, Robojelly goes in only one direction because
all eight segments are activated at the same time.The next step will be
to power each segment, enabling the robot to move and be controlled in
different directions.The study appears in the journal Smart Materials
and Structures, published by Britain's Institute of Physics.
|