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Although guest-filled carbon nanotube yarns provide record performance as torsional and tensile artificial muscles, they are expensive, and only part of the muscle effectively contributes to actuation. We describe a muscle type that provides higher performance, in which the guest that drives actuation is a sheath on a twisted or coiled core that can be an inexpensive yarn. This change from guest-filled to sheath-run artificial muscles increases the maximum work capacity by factors of 1.70 to 2.15 for tensile muscles driven electrothermally or by vapor absorption. A sheath-run electrochemical muscle generates 1.98 watts per gram of average contractile power-40 times that for human muscle and 9.0 times that of the highest power alternative electrochemical muscle. Theory predicts the observed performance advantages of sheath-run muscles.
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Jiuke Mu
Mônica Jung de Andrade
Shaoli Fang
Science
Wuhan University
University of Wollongong
The University of Texas at Dallas
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Mu et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d70af05413bc3de5ab345c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaw2403
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