Issue 15, 2016

Stimuli-responsive cylindrical hydrogels mimic intestinal peristalsis to propel a solid object

Abstract

The emerging field of soft robotics relies on soft, stimuli-responsive materials to enable load transport, manipulation, and mobility in complex unconstrained environments. These materials often need to replicate biological functionality such as muscle contractions and flexibility. Here we demonstrate a soft actuator prototype based on thermosensitive PNIPAAM hydrogels that can transport and manipulate objects. A hollow cylindrical hydrogel was selectively heated and cooled with Peltier devices to yield a traveling wave of shrinking and swelling akin to intestinal peristalsis. A 4 mm diameter bead was placed inside the cylinder and propelled 19.5 mm, equal to distance traveled by the peristaltic wave. We derived conditions that enable peristaltic transport as a function of transporter-cargo design parameters. We conclude that hydrogel-based peristaltic manipulators covering 2 orders of magnitude in stiffness (1–102 kPa) could transport cargo spanning 4 orders of magnitude in size (μm–m).

Graphical abstract: Stimuli-responsive cylindrical hydrogels mimic intestinal peristalsis to propel a solid object

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Oct 2015
Accepted
11 Feb 2016
First published
11 Feb 2016

Soft Matter, 2016,12, 3582-3588

Author version available

Stimuli-responsive cylindrical hydrogels mimic intestinal peristalsis to propel a solid object

V. Nistor, J. Cannell, J. Gregory and L. Yeghiazarian, Soft Matter, 2016, 12, 3582 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM02553B

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