Our muscles are nature's actuators. The sinewy tissue is what generates the forces that make our bodies move. In recent years, engineers have used real muscle tissue to actuate "biohybrid robots" made ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Slime-like artificial muscle reshapes on command, heals after damage and turns one robot into many
Breaking away from conventional robots that perform only predefined functions once fabricated, researchers have developed a ...
Engineers have long tried to build artificial muscles that work like the ones in the human body—strong, flexible, fast, and ...
To solve this, researchers at Generalist strapped wearable pincers, dubbed “data hands,” onto human workers. These devices ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Electrofluidic fiber muscles could enable silent robotic systems
Muscles are remarkably effective systems for generating controlled force, and engineers developing hardware for robots or ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
New artificial muscle shows 91% recovery, reshapes and heals after damage
Researchers at Seoul National University have developed an artificial muscle that can change shape ...
Researchers at the MIT Media Lab and Italy’s Politecnico di Bari have developed artificial muscle fibers that aim to match ...
NUS scientists have developed a self-training method that strengthens lab-grown muscle tissues around the clock, and used them to power a living-muscle robot that swims faster than any of its ...
Scientists have developed a self-training method that strengthens lab-grown muscle tissues around the clock, and used them to power a living-muscle robot that swims faster than any of its predecessors ...
Researchers created tough hydrogel artificial tendons, attached them to lab-grown muscle to form a muscle-tendon unit, then linked the tendons to a robotic gripper's fingers. (Nanowerk News) Our ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results