Liquid metal discovery paves way for
shape-shifting robots
Send a link to a friend
[April 11, 2015]
BEIJING, CHINA - It may look like
nothing more than a small ball of metal, but the shape-shifting and
self-propulsion abilities of a liquid metal alloy discovered by
scientists at China's Tsinghua University has captured the imaginations
of scientists and science-fiction fans across the world.
|
Professor Liu Jing and his team have created what they believe
could prove the first step toward developing a robot similar to the
infamous T-1000 shape-shifting, liquid metal assassin from the
Terminator movies.
The device is made from a drop of metal alloy consisting mostly of
gallium, which is a liquid at just under 30 degrees Celsius. Last
year they discovered that an applied electrical current causes the
gallium alloy to drastically alter its shape. Changing the voltage
applied to the metal allowed it to 'shape-shift' into different
formations. When the current was switched off, the metal returned to
its original drop shape.
But the team made their biggest breakthrough when they realized that
bringing it into contact with a flake of aluminum caused a reaction
creating hydrogen bubbles that allowed it to move of its own accord.
Liu said it was able to 'fuel' itself for about an hour.
"The machine has two processes. One is to create gases like
hydrogen. Part of these gases form the propulsion. There's also
something important, in fact very important, which is the
electricity generated behind the alloy. So this galvanic battery
creates an internal electrical power, and this type of electricity
will very easily lead to stretching of the surface of the liquid
metal in an asymmetrical pattern, and this pattern leads to
rotations inside the liquid metal, and the process of these
rotations will set the liquid metal in motion in a certain
direction," he said.
While the scientists are still learning more about the properties of
the metal, Liu believes it could have a variety of medical
applications, for example delivering medicine in blood vessels.
[to top of second column] |
"At present it has potential to become a robot, but a robot for the
veins. So apart from a robot for the veins it could for example [be
used in] people's windpipes and digestive system, it may perhaps be
able to carry out some medical tasks, for example transporting some
medicines," he said, adding that scientists would of course first
have to ensure that there would be no side-effects to ingesting the
metal.
As for comparisons to the deadly machine in the Terminator movies,
Liu said that while the thought of his discovery bearing resemblance
to the T-1000 did make him chuckle, he hoped that his robot would
work for the good of mankind.
"Perhaps people think it's like the Terminator but I think to a
certain extent the Terminator's not very good, he wasn't good for
mankind. So we hope that if in the future we can really make a soft
robot, we hope that it can be a more human-like robot," he said.
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|