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Four-dimensional (4D) printing relies on multimaterial printing, reinforcement patterns, or micro/nanofibrous additives as programmable tools to achieve desired shape reconfigurations. However, existing programming approaches still follow the so-called origami design principle to generate reconfigurable structures by self-folding stacked 2D materials, particularly at small scales. Here, we propose a programmable modular design that directly constructs 3D reconfigurable microstructures capable of sophisticated 3D-to-3D shape transformations by assembling 4D micro-building blocks. 4D direct laser writing is used to print two-photon polymerizable, stimuli-responsive hydrogels to construct building blocks at micrometer scales. Denavit-Hartenberg (DH) parameters, used to define robotic arm kinematics, are introduced as guidelines for how to assemble the micro-building blocks and plan the 3D motion of assembled chain blocks. Last, a 3D-printed microscaled transformer capable of changing its shape from a race car to a humanoid robot is devised and fabricated using the DH parameters to guide the motion of various assembled compartments.
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Tian‐Yun Huang
Robotics Research (United States)
Hen‐Wei Huang
Nanyang Technological University
Dongdong Jin
Sun Yat-sen University
Science Advances
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Brigham and Women's Hospital
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Huang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69de58f5726bee048db0bda3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aav8219
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