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Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length change of hundreds of percent, and active control of growth direction. This results in the abilities to move through tightly constrained environments and form useful three-dimensional structures from the body. We report a class of soft pneumatic robot that is capable of a basic form of this behavior, growing substantially in length from the tip while actively controlling direction using onboard sensing of environmental stimuli; further, the peak rate of lengthening is comparable to rates of animal and robot locomotion. This is enabled by two principles: Pressurization of an inverted thin-walled vessel allows rapid and substantial lengthening of the tip of the robot body, and controlled asymmetric lengthening of the tip allows directional control. Further, we demonstrate the abilities to lengthen through constrained environments by exploiting passive deformations and form three-dimensional structures by lengthening the body of the robot along a path. Our study helps lay the foundation for engineered systems that grow to navigate the environment.
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Elliot W. Hawkes
University of California, Santa Barbara
Laura H. Blumenschein
Purdue University West Lafayette
Joseph A. Greer
Harvard University
Science Robotics
Stanford University
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Hawkes et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69daaf974a1e15904c835a8e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/scirobotics.aan3028
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