A flexible, octopus-inspired robotic arm may soon operate entirely free of wires or internal electronics. Developed by engineers at Rice University, this new soft robotic arm is controlled by laser beams and capable of executing complex tasks such as navigating around obstacles and precisely hitting targets.
This innovation marks the first real-time, reconfigurable, and automated control of a light-responsive material used in soft robotics. The key to the arm’s movement lies in a specialized material known as azobenzene liquid crystal elastomer. This light-responsive polymer contracts under blue laser light and quickly returns to its original shape in the dark, allowing for rapid, programmable motion.
Continue reading… “Laser-Controlled Soft Robotic Arm Mimics Octopus Movements”
