• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
HK Businesswire
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • PR Newswire
    • Science
    • World

    Banking sector looks to fund Central Asia’s boom

    Haier Biomedical Achieves Double No. 1 Ranking in Euromonitor’s Global Life Science Lab Equipment Report, Caps Three-Phase Global Expansion

    Haier Biomedical Achieves Double No. 1 Ranking in Euromonitor’s Global Life Science Lab Equipment Report, Caps Three-Phase Global Expansion

    Principal in swearing case submits resignation

    Unikeyic Electronics Ranked No. 19 on Supply Chain Connect’s 2026 Top 50 Global Electronics Distributors List

    Unikeyic Electronics Ranked No. 19 on Supply Chain Connect’s 2026 Top 50 Global Electronics Distributors List

    Acer Expands Gaming Portfolio With Predator Atlas 8 Handheld Powered by Intel

    Acer Expands Gaming Portfolio With Predator Atlas 8 Handheld Powered by Intel

    Acer Broadens Portfolio with Two New Laptops Powered by the Latest Snapdragon Processors

    Acer Broadens Portfolio with Two New Laptops Powered by the Latest Snapdragon Processors

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • PR Newswire
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Mobile
    • Startup

    Xiaomi Cuts MiMo-V2.5 API Prices by Up to 99% Worldwide

    Hong Kong Medical Implant Firm Koln 3D to Expand into Central Asia

    Hong Kong Sets Cap on Ride-Hailing Cars in Landmark Regulatory Move

    Alipay Launches AI Wallet and Token Pay After Completing 300 Million AI Transactions

    Xiaomi Unveils YU7 GT SUV and Full Smart Ecosystem Expansion in Beijing

    Li Ka Shing Foundation to Fund Histotripsy Treatment for 200 Liver Cancer Patients in Hong Kong

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Feature
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • PR Newswire
    • Science
    • World

    Banking sector looks to fund Central Asia’s boom

    Haier Biomedical Achieves Double No. 1 Ranking in Euromonitor’s Global Life Science Lab Equipment Report, Caps Three-Phase Global Expansion

    Haier Biomedical Achieves Double No. 1 Ranking in Euromonitor’s Global Life Science Lab Equipment Report, Caps Three-Phase Global Expansion

    Principal in swearing case submits resignation

    Unikeyic Electronics Ranked No. 19 on Supply Chain Connect’s 2026 Top 50 Global Electronics Distributors List

    Unikeyic Electronics Ranked No. 19 on Supply Chain Connect’s 2026 Top 50 Global Electronics Distributors List

    Acer Expands Gaming Portfolio With Predator Atlas 8 Handheld Powered by Intel

    Acer Expands Gaming Portfolio With Predator Atlas 8 Handheld Powered by Intel

    Acer Broadens Portfolio with Two New Laptops Powered by the Latest Snapdragon Processors

    Acer Broadens Portfolio with Two New Laptops Powered by the Latest Snapdragon Processors

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • PR Newswire
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Mobile
    • Startup

    Xiaomi Cuts MiMo-V2.5 API Prices by Up to 99% Worldwide

    Hong Kong Medical Implant Firm Koln 3D to Expand into Central Asia

    Hong Kong Sets Cap on Ride-Hailing Cars in Landmark Regulatory Move

    Alipay Launches AI Wallet and Token Pay After Completing 300 Million AI Transactions

    Xiaomi Unveils YU7 GT SUV and Full Smart Ecosystem Expansion in Beijing

    Li Ka Shing Foundation to Fund Histotripsy Treatment for 200 Liver Cancer Patients in Hong Kong

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Feature
No Result
View All Result
HK Businesswire
No Result
View All Result
Home News Science

A new type of electrically driven artificial muscle fiber

David Lee by David Lee
9 April 2026
in Science
0
0
SHARES
5
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Muscles are remarkably effective systems for generating controlled force, and engineers developing hardware for robots or prosthetics have long struggled to create analogs that can approach their unique combination of strength, rapid response, scalability, and control. But now, researchers at the MIT Media Lab and Politecnico di Bari in Italy have developed artificial muscle fibers that come closer to matching many of these qualities.Like the fibers that bundle together to form biological muscles, these fibers can be arranged in different configurations to meet the demands of a given task. Unlike conventional robotic actuation systems, they are compliant enough to interface comfortably with the human body and operate silently without motors, external pumps, or other bulky supporting hardware.The new electrofluidic fiber muscles — electrically driven actuators built in fiber format — are described in a recent paper published in Science Robotics. The work is led by Media Lab PhD candidate Ozgun Kilic Afsar; Vito Cacucciolo, a professor at the Politecnico di Bari; and four co-authors.The new system brings together two technologies, Afsar explains. One is a fluidically driven artificial muscle known as a thin McKibben actuator, and the other is a miniaturized solid-state pump based on electrohydrodynamics (EHD), which can generate pressure inside a sealed fluid compartment without moving parts or an external fluid supply.Until now, most fluid-driven soft actuators have relied on external “heavy, bulky, oftentimes noisy hydraulic infrastructure,” Afsar says, “which makes them difficult to integrate into systems where mobility or compact, lightweight design is important.” This has created a fundamental bottleneck in the practical use of fluidic actuators in real-world applications.The key to breaking through that bottleneck was the use of integrated pumps based on electrohydrodynamic principles. These millimeter-scale, electrically driven pumps generate pressure and flow by injecting charge into a dielectric fluid, creating ions that drag the fluid along with them. Weighing just a few grams each and not much thicker than a toothpick, they can be fabricated continuously and scaled easily. “We integrated these fiber pumps into a closed fluidic circuit with the thin McKibben actuators,” Afsar says, noting that this was not a simple task given the different dynamics of the two components.A key design strategy was to pair these fibers in what are known as antagonistic configurations. Cacucciolo explains that this is where “one muscle contracts while another elongates,” as when you bend your arm and your biceps contract while your triceps stretch. In their system, a millimeter-scale fiber pump sits between two similarly scaled McKibben actuators, driving fluid into one actuator to contract it while simultaneously relaxing the other.“This is very much reminiscent of how biological muscles are configured and organized,” Afsar says. “We didn’t choose this configuration simply for the sake of biomimicry, but because we needed a way to store the fluid within the muscle design.” The need for an external reservoir open to the atmosphere has been one of the main factors limiting the practical use of EHD pumps in robotic systems outside the lab. By pairing two McKibben fibers in line, with a fiber pump between them to form a closed circuit, the team eliminated that need entirely.Another key finding was that the muscle fibers needed to be pre-pressurized, rather than simply filled. “There is a minimum internal system pressure that the system can tolerate,” Afsar says, “below which the pump can degrade or temporarily stop working.” This happens because of cavitation, in which vapor bubbles form when the pressure at the pump inlet drops below the vapor pressure of the liquid, eventually leading to dielectric breakdown.To prevent cavitation, they applied a “bias” pressure from the outset so that the pressure at the fiber pump inlet never falls below the liquid’s vapor pressure. The magnitude of this bias pressure can be adjusted depending on the application. “To achieve the maximum contraction the muscle can generate, we found there is a specific bias pressure range that is optimal,” she says. “If you want to configure the system for faster response, you might increase that bias pressure, though with some reduction in maximum contraction.”Cacucciolo adds that most of today’s robotic limbs and hands are built around electric servo motors, whose configuration differs fundamentally from that of natural muscles. Servo motors generate rotational motion on a shaft that must be converted into linear movement, whereas muscle fibers naturally contract and extend linearly, as do these electrofluidic fibers. “Most robotic arms and humanoid robots are designed around the servo motors that drive them,” he says. “That creates integration constraints, because servo motors are hard to package densely and tend to concentrate mass near the joints they drive. By contrast, artificial muscles in fiber form can be packed tightly inside a robot or exoskeleton and distributed throughout the structure, rather than concentrated near a joint.”These electrofluidic muscles may be especially useful for wearable applications, such as exoskeletons that help a person lift heavier loads or assistive devices that restore or augment dexterity. But the underlying principles could also apply more broadly. “Our findings extend to fluid-driven robotic systems in general,” Cacucciolo says. “Wherever fluidic actuators are used, or where engineers want to replace external pumps with internal ones, these design principles could apply across a wide range of fluid-driven robotic systems.”This work “presents a major advancement in fiber-format soft actuation,” which “addresses several long-standing hurdles in the field, particularly regarding portability and power density,” says Herbert Shea, a professor in the Soft Transducers Laboratory at Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne in Switzerland, who was not associated with this research. “The lack of moving parts in the pump makes these muscles silent, a major advantage for prosthetic devices and assistive clothing,” he says.Shea adds that “this high-quality and rigorous work bridges the gap between fundamental fluid dynamics and practical robotic applications. The authors provide a complete system-level solution — characterizing the individual components, developing a predictive physical model, and validating it through a range of demonstrators.”In addition to Afsar and Cacucciolo, the team also included Gabriele Pupillo and Gennaro Vitucci at Politecnico di Bari and Wedyan Babatain and Professor Hiroshi Ishii at the MIT Media Lab. The work was supported by the European Research Council and the Media Lab’s multi-sponsored consortium.

Tags: Science
David Lee

David Lee

Read More

Key Chemistry Question Answered, No Quantum Computer Required

29 May 2026

New laboratory at MIT aims to advance quantum research for the nation

28 May 2026
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Tongcheng Travel Achieves Revenue of 5 Billion in 2026Q1 Growing User Base and APUs Increases to 254 Million

21 May 2026

USC Thornton Chamber Singers Make Hong Kong Debut at Inter-School Choral Festival

26 May 2026
CodeCoin Named World Finance Forum “Tech Innovation Growth Enterprise”; Compliant Digital Payment Infrastructure Gains Industry Recognition

CodeCoin Named World Finance Forum “Tech Innovation Growth Enterprise”; Compliant Digital Payment Infrastructure Gains Industry Recognition

26 May 2026

10 hurt as turbulence hits Cathay flight from Brisbane

23 May 2026

Banking sector looks to fund Central Asia’s boom

28 May 2026
Haier Biomedical Achieves Double No. 1 Ranking in Euromonitor’s Global Life Science Lab Equipment Report, Caps Three-Phase Global Expansion

Haier Biomedical Achieves Double No. 1 Ranking in Euromonitor’s Global Life Science Lab Equipment Report, Caps Three-Phase Global Expansion

28 May 2026

Principal in swearing case submits resignation

28 May 2026
Unikeyic Electronics Ranked No. 19 on Supply Chain Connect’s 2026 Top 50 Global Electronics Distributors List

Unikeyic Electronics Ranked No. 19 on Supply Chain Connect’s 2026 Top 50 Global Electronics Distributors List

28 May 2026

Recent News

Banking sector looks to fund Central Asia’s boom

28 May 2026
Haier Biomedical Achieves Double No. 1 Ranking in Euromonitor’s Global Life Science Lab Equipment Report, Caps Three-Phase Global Expansion

Haier Biomedical Achieves Double No. 1 Ranking in Euromonitor’s Global Life Science Lab Equipment Report, Caps Three-Phase Global Expansion

28 May 2026

Principal in swearing case submits resignation

28 May 2026
Unikeyic Electronics Ranked No. 19 on Supply Chain Connect’s 2026 Top 50 Global Electronics Distributors List

Unikeyic Electronics Ranked No. 19 on Supply Chain Connect’s 2026 Top 50 Global Electronics Distributors List

28 May 2026
HK Businesswire

Stay ahead with the latest insights on Hong Kong’s economy, finance, and investments. From market trends to policy updates, we bring you in-depth analysis and expert opinions.

📩 Subscribe to our newsletter for exclusive updates.
📍 Follow us on social media for real-time news.
📧 Contact us: info@hongkong-invest.com

Follow Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2025 by HKBusinesswire.com

No Result
View All Result

© 2025 by HKBusinesswire.com