posted on 2024-04-06, 13:06authored byLei Wu, Xia Huang, Meng Wang, Jishizhan Chen, Jinke Chang, Han Zhang, Xuetong Zhang, Andrew Conn, Jonathan Rossiter, Martin Birchall, Wenhui Song
Light-driven soft actuators based on photoresponsive
materials
can be used to mimic biological motion, such as hand movements, without
involving rigid or bulky electromechanical actuations. However, to
our knowledge, no robust photoresponsive material with desireable
mechanical and biological properties and relatively simple manufacture
exists for robotics and biomedical applications. Herein, we report
a new visible-light-responsive thermoplastic elastomer synthesized
by introducing photoswitchable moieties (i.e., azobenzene derivatives)
into the main chain of poly(ε-caprolactone) based polyurethane
urea (PAzo). A PAzo elastomer exhibits controllable light-driven stiffness
softening due to its unique nanophase structure in response to light,
while possessing excellent hyperelasticity (stretchability of 575.2%,
elastic modulus of 17.6 MPa, and strength of 44.0 MPa). A bilayer
actuator consisting of PAzo and polyimide films is developed, demonstrating
tunable bending modes by varying incident light intensities. Actuation
mechanism via photothermal and photochemical coupling effects of a
soft–hard nanophase is demonstrated through both experimental
and theoretical analyses. We demonstrate an exemplar application of
visible-light-controlled soft “fingers” playing a piano
on a smartphone. The robustness of the PAzo elastomer and its scalability,
in addition to its excellent biocompatibility, opens the door to the
development of reproducible light-driven wearable/implantable actuators
and lightweight soft robots for clinical applications.