Light-fuelled freestyle self-oscillators

Self-oscillation is a phenomenon where an object sustains periodic motion upon non-periodic stimulus. It occurs commonly in nature, a few examples being heartbeat, sea waves and fluttering of leaves. Stimuli-responsive materials allow creating synthetic self-oscillators fuelled by different forms of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2019-11, Vol.10 (1), p.5057-9, Article 5057
Hauptverfasser: Zeng, Hao, Lahikainen, Markus, Liu, Li, Ahmed, Zafar, Wani, Owies M., Wang, Meng, Yang, Hong, Priimagi, Arri
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Self-oscillation is a phenomenon where an object sustains periodic motion upon non-periodic stimulus. It occurs commonly in nature, a few examples being heartbeat, sea waves and fluttering of leaves. Stimuli-responsive materials allow creating synthetic self-oscillators fuelled by different forms of energy, e.g. heat, light and chemicals, showing great potential for applications in power generation, autonomous mass transport, and self-propelled micro-robotics. However, most of the self-oscillators are based on bending deformation, thereby limiting their possibilities of being implemented in practical applications. Here, we report light-fuelled self-oscillators based on liquid crystal network actuators that can exhibit three basic oscillation modes: bending, twisting and contraction-expansion. We show that a time delay in material response dictates the self-oscillation dynamics, and realize a freestyle self-oscillator that combines numerous oscillation modes simultaneously by adjusting the excitation beam position. The results provide new insights into understanding of self-oscillation phenomenon and offer new designs for future self-propelling micro-robots. Though light-driven self-oscillators offer the possibility of autonomous self-sustained motion, existing oscillators are limited in their range of oscillation modes. Here, the authors report freestyle cantilever-type photoactuators that show versatile oscillation modes.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-019-13077-6