This scanning electron microscope image shows a coiled unipolar muscle made from carbon nanotubes and coated with poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate). The outer coil diameter is approximately 140µm, about twice that of a human hair. Image: University of Texas at Dallas.
This scanning electron microscope image shows a coiled unipolar muscle made from carbon nanotubes and coated with poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate). The outer coil diameter is approximately 140µm, about twice that of a human hair. Image: University of Texas at Dallas.

For more than 15 years, researchers at the University of Texas (UT) at Dallas and their collaborators in the US, Australia, South Korea and China have been fabricating artificial muscles by twisting and coiling carbon nanotube or polymer yarns. When thermally powered, these muscles actuate by contracting along their length when heated and returning to their initial length when cooled. Such thermally driven artificial muscles, however, have limitations.

Electrochemically driven carbon nanotube (CNT) muscles provide an alternative approach to meet the growing need for fast, powerful, large-stroke artificial muscles for applications ranging from robotics and heart pumps to morphing clothing.

"Electrochemically driven muscles are especially promising, since their energy conversion efficiencies are not restricted by the thermodynamic heat engine limit of thermal muscles, and they can maintain large contractile strokes while supporting heavy loads without consuming significant energy," said Ray Baughman, director of the Alan G. MacDiarmid NanoTech Institute at UT Dallas. "In contrast, human muscles and thermally powered muscles need a large amount of input energy to support heavy loads even when not accomplishing mechanical work."

In a paper in Science, the researchers report creating powerful, unipolar electrochemical yarn muscles that contract more when driven faster, thereby solving important problems that have limited applications for these muscles.

Electrochemically powered CNT yarn muscles are actuated by applying a voltage between the muscle and a counter electrode, which drives ions from a surrounding electrolyte into the muscle.

But there are limitations to electrochemical CNT muscles. First, the muscle actuation is bipolar, which means that muscle movement – either expansion or contraction – switches direction during a potential scan. The potential at which the stroke switches direction is the potential of zero charge, and the rate at which the potential changes over time is the potential scan rate.

Another issue is that a given electrolyte is stable only over a particular range of voltages. Outside this range, the electrolyte breaks down.

"Previous yarn muscles cannot use the full stability range of the electrolyte," said Baughman, a corresponding author of the paper. "Also, the muscle's capacitance – its ability to store the charge needed for actuation – decreases with increasing potential scan rate, causing the muscle's stroke to dramatically decrease with increasing actuation rate."

To solve these problems, the researchers discovered that the interior surfaces of coiled carbon nanotube yarns could be coated with a suitable ionically conducting polymer that contains either positively or negatively charged chemical groups.

"This polymer coating converts the normal bipolar actuation of carbon nanotube yarns to unipolar actuation, where the muscle actuates in one direction over the entire stability range of the electrolyte," Baughman said. "This long-sought behavior has surprising consequences that make electrochemical carbon nanotube muscles much faster and more powerful."

"The dipolar field of the polymer shifts the potential of zero charge – which is where the electronic charge on the nanotubes changes sign – to outside the electrolyte's stability range," explained chemistry doctoral student Zhong Wang, a co-first author of the paper. "Hence, ions of only one sign are electrochemically injected to compensate this electronic charge, and the muscle's stroke changes in one direction over this entire useable potential scan range."

As Jiuke Mu, associate research professor in the UT Dallas NanoTech Institute and a co-first author, explained, this polymer coating helps solve the capacitance problem of electrochemical yarn muscles.

"The number of solvent molecules pumped into the muscle by each ion increases with increasing potential scan rate for some unipolar muscles, which increases the effective ion size that drives actuation," he said. "Thus, muscle stroke can increase by a factor of 3.8 with increasing potential scan rate, while the stroke of carbon nanotube yarn muscles without the polymer coating decreases by a factor of 4.2 for the same changes in potential scan rate."

These advances produce electrochemical unipolar muscles that contract to generate a maximum average output mechanical power per muscle weight of 2.9 watts/gram. This is about 10 times the typical capability of human muscle and about 2.2 times the weight-normalized power capability of a turbocharged V-8 diesel engine.

The polymer coating used to produce these results was poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate), which is approved for drug use and inexpensive enough for use in water softening. Incorporating this polymer guest allowed practical operation of a carbon nanotube muscle from high temperatures to below -30°C.

Wang said the team also discovered that unipolar behavior, without scan-rate enhanced strokes, could be obtained by incorporating graphene oxide nanoplatelets within the yarn muscle using a biscrolling process that UT Dallas researchers created and patented.

"Use of this guest to provide the dipolar fields needed for unipolar behavior increased the maximum average contractile mechanical power output from the muscle to a remarkable 8.2 watts/gram, which is 29 times the maximum capability of the same weight human muscle and about 6.2 times that of a turbocharged V-8 diesel engine," Wang said.

"We also discovered that two different types of unipolar yarn muscles, each with scan-rate-enhanced strokes, can be combined to make a dual-electrode, all-solid-state yarn muscle, thereby eliminating the need for a liquid electrolyte bath. A solid-state electrolyte is used to laterally interconnect two coiled carbon nanotube yarns that contain different polymer guests, one having negatively charged substituents and the other having positively charged substituents. Both yarns contract during charging to additively contribute to actuation, because of the injection of positive and negative ions, respectively. These dual electrode unipolar muscles were woven to make actuating textiles that could be used for morphing clothing."

This story is adapted from material from the University of Texas at Dallas, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.