Wusha
Miao
and
Hedan
Bai
*
Department of Materials, ETH Zurich, Switzerland, 8093, Zurich, Switzerland. E-mail: hedan.bai@mat.ethz.ch
First published on 12th July 2024
Sustainable robotics is an emerging field of research that aims to develop robotic automation solutions to address the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals. The material-centric approach to sustainable robotics focuses on designing robots with novel sustainable materials starting from natural or recycled raw materials, demonstrating self-healing reusability, and eventually recycled, upcycled, or biodegraded with minimal environmental impact. The ultimate goal is to realize a physical robotic embodiment with a circular life-cycle. This perspective highlights recent advances in material science, ranging from self-healing materials to biodegradable and recyclable materials, which serve as the foundation for this emerging class of robots. We then showcase examples of functional material integration in sustainable robotic components and discuss challenges and opportunities towards an entirely sustainable robotic system.
Conventional robots assemble mechatronic components composed of rigid materials (i.e., metals, plastics) into sophisticated functional modules for robotic actuation, sensing, and control. The sustainability challenge, therefore, is comparable, if not more pronounced due to the complex construction, to electronic wastes. Alternatively, soft robotics is a maturing field that adopts a bottom-up approach to drive robotic advances with material innovations. Emulating the material composition of living organisms where soft materials occupy a majority of the body mass, soft robotics uses soft materials (i.e., hydrogel, silicone, polyurethane elastomers, etc.) to create novel actuation, sensing, and control mechanisms for a goal of advanced robotic physical intelligence. From the sustainability perspective, the new material science of sustainable robotics naturally echoes with the approach of soft robotics, as (i) soft materials have seen rapid progress in the expanding material and mechanism library that addresses sustainability (e.g., self-healing, recyclable, biodegradable); (ii) design paradigm for functional actuation, sensing, and control mechanisms in soft robotics could be smoothly translated to sustainable robotics.
An ideal circular life cycle of a sustainable soft robot (Fig. 1) would entail (i) starting with a raw material that is either natural or recycled; (ii) self-heals once damaged to enable reuse; (iii) biodegrades or can be recycled/upcycled at the end-of-life. As the exciting sustainable organic material library burgeoning in recent years, functional sustainable materials start to spur the growth of green electronics and spark the development of sustainable robotics.3 Even in its nascent stage, soft robotic components have already addressed certain aspects of a sustainable cycle (Fig. 1). In this perspective, we will discuss sustainable materials and mechanisms to achieve a circular robotic life-cycle and show examples of soft robotic devices tackling different parts of this cycle. At last, it is worth noting that as we start to build robots with sustainable soft materials, not only could we address sustainability challenges, but also bring opportunities to advance robotic intelligence to become closer to living organisms. In essence, we can use sustainable materials to improve robots’ ability to survive, reconfigure, and adapt without supervision.
Fig. 1 The life cycle assessment of sustainable soft robots. Three main phases are classified from cradle to grave. Raw materials that are natural or recycled and manufacturing encode the original sustainable character at the start-of-life. Self-healing enables to reuse and refunction from damage at the middle-of-life. Degradable and recyclable allows degradation and recycle into a new life at the end-of-life instead of being discarded directly. Reproduced from ref. 4; Copyright 2023, Springer Nature. Reproduced from ref. 5; Copyright 2020, Springer Nature. Reproduced from ref. 6; Copyright 2022, the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Reproduced from ref. 7; Copyright 2023, Springer Nature. Reproduced from ref. 8; Copyright 2023, the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Reproduced from ref. 9; Copyright 2017, the American Association for the Advancement of Science. |
Fig. 2 Self-healing materials and mechanisms. (a) Three approaches for self-healing. From left to right shows the mechanism of encapsulation, cardiovascular network and intrinsic reversible bonds.12 Reproduced from ref. 12. Copyright 2010, Annual Reviews. (b) Self-healing based on dynamic covalent chemistry. The scraped surface could be self-healed by intrinsic dynamic Diels–Alder exchange reactions at the interface upon heating (120 °C).11,15 Reproduced from ref. 11; Copyright 2020, Springer Nature; reproduced from ref. 15; Copyright 2002; the American Association for the Advancement of Science. (c) Self-healing based on dynamic non-covalent chemistry, including H-bonding, π–π stacking, guest–host chemistry, metal–ligand coordination and ionic interaction.11 Multi dynamic layers could be autonomously self-aligned via phase separation and healed by association and dissociation of hydrogen bonds.16 Right: Chemical structures of different layers. Reproduced from ref. 11; Copyright 2020, Springer Nature; reproduced from ref. 16; Copyright 2023, the American Association for the Advancement of Science. |
Intrinsic self-healing relies on the breakage and reformation of reversible bonds,17 which can be generally categorized into two types, covalent and non-covalent, differentiated by the feature of dynamic bonds (Fig. 2b and c).11,18 For dynamic covalent chemistry, bonds are covalently linked, but can undergo dynamic bond exchange reaction to achieve self-healing. Two types (covalent and free radical rebonding) are illustrated in (Fig. 2b). In comparison, free-radical rebonding could easily suffer from deactivation due to oxygen and moisture in the open environment, that negatively affects healing performance. The more stable process of covalent rebonding allows to achieve self-healing with higher repair efficiency. Fig. 2b shows the first example of intrinsic self-healing achieved by dynamic Diels–Alder (DA) bonds.15 Triggered by heat, DA adducts (3M4F) would break above 120 °C that activates the mobility of polymer chains at the rubbery state to repair the scraped surface. The significant advantage of dynamic covalent chemistry is that it offers comparable bonding strength with common covalent bonds, which are suitable matrix to design strong and tough healable materials. The mechanical strength could be programmed from 105 Pa to 108 Pa. Herein, external stimulus (heating) is necessary to trigger the break and reform of DA bonds, which could be termed as non-autonomous self-healing. Instead of heating, other triggers including light, pH and mechanical force are explored by delicate chemistry design.19,20 In contrast, autonomous self-healing allows the process to proceed without external intervention, which is enabled by spontaneous dynamic bonds. For example, aromatic disulfide bonds can undergo dynamic exchange reactions without any triggers due to the resonance stabilization and steric effect of benzene rings.21 This would offer unprecedented opportunities to soft robots that can autonomously recover from damage.
Compared with dynamic covalent chemistries, supramolecular (noncovalent) bonds that are linked by electrostatic interaction, van der Waals forces can break and reform more easily, which offer more flexibility in material design (Fig. 2c).22 For instance, hydrogen bonds based on electrostatic attraction can form between various atoms and functional groups, such as oxygen, nitrogen, and fluorine. Owing to the intrinsic character of non-covalency, the strength of hydrogen bonds is generally weaker than covalent bonds. However, it could bring in high tunability of their strength. Combing multiple types of hydrogen bonds of different strength, strong and stretchable materials can be achieved. In detail, Bao et al. demonstrated a supramolecular elastomer with excellent mechanical properties (high stretchability of 1200% and high toughness of 12000 J m−2) by utilizing multi-strength hydrogen bonds.23 Two types of hydrogen bonding are formed in the network between aromatic/aliphatic nitrogen and hydrogen groups, which are cooperative (strong) and anti-operative (weak), respectively. At the same time, autonomous self-healing was achieved by the intrinsic hydrogen bond, even under artificial sweater. Furthermore, the geometry and distance of hydrogen bond strongly influence its strength. Distinguished from conventional linear hydrogen-bonding, zigzag-array of dense hydrogen bonds make it possible to synthesize mechanically robust (∼1.4 GPa of elastic modulus) yet readily healable polymers.24 The versatility and flexibility of hydrogen bonds offer the benefit of material programmability and therefore, are attractive for use as robotic materials with diverse molecular design possibilities. For example, leveraging hydrogen bonds on two immiscible backbones, multiple dynamic layers could automatically self-align via phase separation and self-heal by association and dissociation of hydrogen bonds at the interface16 (Fig. 2c). In addition, other types of non-covalent chemistry, including host–guest bonding, metal–ligand coordination and ionic interaction also enable readily accessibility and ease programmability. For example, the coordination strengthen of metal–ligand bonds could be programmed by introducing different metal ions and ligands, which results in tuneable dynamic mechanical properties.25–27 Furthermore, ion dipole interaction between ionic liquids and fluorinated polymers is another type of ionic interaction that have been successfully developed as ionic conductors for soft sensors.28 The easily broken and reformed dynamic supramolecular bonds could proceed without external intervention, enabling fast and autonomous self-healing. The dynamic nature of both covalent and supramolecular dynamic bonds, however, leads to severe viscoelasticity, which creates undesired effects in robotic actuator and sensor performance, as we will discuss in later sections.
One way to achieve self-healing actuator is through macroscopic integration of self-healing materials with existing soft robotic actuation mechanisms. Fluidic elastomer actuators (FEA) based on mechanical deformation triggered by fluid pressure are widely explored due to ease fabrication. In a self-healing FEA, a biosynthetic protein could recover from micro and macro-level damage within seconds enabled by optimized network morphology (Fig. 3a).30 Herein, hydrogen-bonded β-sheet nanostructures are served as physical crosslinks to offer adequate mechanical strength. The easily broken and reformed multiple hydrogen bonds enable chain diffusion to achieve fast self-healing. The exquisite material design allows to balance the competition between healing efficiency and mechanical strengthen for soft grippers. The post-healing strength could reach up to 23 MPa after extremely limited healing time (1 s). At the same time, 400% actuation performance and 5 N output force can be achieved for grippers. Beyond, electroactive actuators exploit Maxwell stress to induce expansion/contraction under electrical stimuli. An interesting example is hydraulically amplified self-healing electrostatic (HASEL) actuators, where liquid dielectric substitutes solid elastomer as the dielectric material in electroactive actuators to enable self-healing from electrical breakdown.31 With different geometry design, HASEL can achieve various actuation modes with muscle-like performance under electrostatic and hydraulic forces. Another method to encode self-healing ability in actuators is via microscopic molecular design. Self-healing dynamic bonds are introduced into stimuli responsive networks that generate actuation upon stimulus such as heat, light, electrical, chemical, magnetic and acoustic, allowing remote control of untethered soft robot to operate in remote or inaccessible environments.32 More recently, dynamic covalent network polymers that exhibit solid-state plasticity to allow shape-morphing are drawing increasing attention.18,33 Instead of reshaping at fluidic state, permanent shape reconfiguration can be achieved at solid state by dynamic bonds exchange to relax internal stress. The reshaping process proceeds without need of traditional shaping moulds that allows access to more complicated shapes. For example, by incorporating dynamic ester bonds, dielectric elastomers with the ability to be manipulated into arbitrary 3D geometry could achieve multimodal motions, rather than planar expansion/contraction, in dielectric elastomeric actuators.34 It is predicted that dynamic bonds could allow shape-morphing and self-healing at the same time owing to intrinsic dynamic bonds exchange. This would enable promising application on self-healable robots with multimodal motions that can perform complex tasks in complex environments.
Fig. 3 Self-healing soft actuators and sensors. (a) Pneumatic actuators built from biosynthetic protein with optimized hydrogen-bonded β-sheet nanostructure and network morphology to balance healing efficiency and viscoelasticity for soft grippers.30 Reproduced from ref. 30; Copyright 2020, Springer Nature. (b) Electrical sensors based on an organogel composite with conductive particles embedded in. Spontaneous mechanical and electrical self-healing can be achieved by hydrogen bonds and reconnection pathways of conductive particles, respectively.7 Reproduced from ref. 7; Copyright 2023, Springer Nature. (c) A damage intelligent soft-bodied system as the optomechanical sensor fabricated on self-healable, transparent and tough polyurethane in combination of dynamic hydrogen bonds and aromatic disulfides.6 Reproduced from ref. 6; Copyright 2022, the American Association for the Advancement of Science. |
Liquid-crystalline based actuators are widely exploited due to ease operation and large deformation. From a molecular level, the underlying actuation mechanism relies on reversible liquid crystalline phase change that results in macroscopic deformation.35 For instance, triggered by light, azobenzene liquid crystals can undergo reversible cis–trans isomerization that offer the advantage of photomechanical motion. An azobenzene-containing liquid crystalline polyurethane was synthesized to exhibit light-driven actuation. At the same time, the intrinsic hydrogen bonding between urethane bonds enables self-healing with muscle-like performance.36 Besides, actuators based on bilayer structures are also explored due to ease of programmability. The underlying mechanism is that composites have totally different responses (thermal expansion coefficient, solvent absorption, and etc.) between bilayers.37–39 A robust, healable robot with noncovalent assembled gradient nanostructures is designed to exhibit light-triggered locomotion, resulted from the mismatch of volumetric changes between the upper and bottom sides.37 Multiple hydrogen bonds enable high self-healing efficiency (89%) at room temperature.
In contrast to actuators that undergo mechanical deformation upon stimulus, sensors can detect physical and chemical signals as soft electronics. The sensing function is principally attributed to the change of resistive and capacitive under triggers, which are determined by intrinsic conductive polymers (e.g., polypyrrole PPy, poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) PEDOT, and polyaniline PANI) or embedded conducting fillers (e.g., metallic particles, ionic liquid, carbon nanotubes and graphene). Herein, the requirement for material substrate is demanding that it should have robust elasticity, high healing efficiency and good compatibility with conducive particles, which determines the reliability and stability of sensing signals. Dynamic bonds enable self-healing efficiency that the function of sensing should keep unchanged before and after damage, however, unavoidably leads to unwanted viscoelasticity that causes drift and hysteresis to impedes the accuracy of signals. And autonomous self-healing is preferable, where external stimulus (high temperature) to trigger dynamic bonds reaction could adversely affect electrical percolate network. Therefore, the design of dynamic chemistry should be carefully considered. To achieve the goal, an organogel composite with electrically conductive silver microflakes and liquid metal microdroplets embedded was synthesized to enable high conductivity (7 × 104 S m−1) and stretchability (>400%) with potential application in soft circuits and reconfigurable bioelectrodes (Fig. 3b).7 Herein, mechanical healing was enabled by reformation of dynamic hydrogen bonds with healing efficiency up to 96.4%. And electrical healing was achieved via reattach and reconnection between neighbouring electrical particles to restore conductive pathway with 95% healing efficiency. Beyond inorganic metallic particles, ionic liquids are a type of ion conducive monomers that also could be suitable candidates for electrical sensors.40,41 An ion conductor with ion-mediated-cluster exhibits fast self-healing efficiency 90% within 1 min via quick formation of ion clusters between ionic liquids and charged units in polymers.41
Parallel to soft electrical sensors, soft optical sensors present an emerging sensing platform that leverages the broad bandwidth of light and its interaction with soft materials to achieve robust, multimodal robotic/tactile sensing performance.42 Optical waveguide presents a simple embodiment of such sensor, which consists of an elastomeric dielectric core with higher refractive index surrounded by an elastomeric cladding with lower refractive index (which can also be air). Soft optical sensors are intrinsically compatible with self-healing functions since (1) the simple construction does not require conductive materials and thus circumvents the stringent requirement of realignment of conductive pathway; and (2) light can overcome small gaps and continue propagation in a waveguide and therefore allows more robust self-healable sensing signal. For self-healing soft optical sensor, the material requirement is much simpler to enable self-healable signal-dielectric soft material with high transparency. To simultaneously achieve good sensing performance, on the other hand, requires much more elaborate design, as in the case with soft electrical sensors. Fig. 3c demonstrates a self-healable soft optical sensor composed of self-healing polyurethane–urea (sPUU) that is not easily broken (high toughness, ∼60 MJ m−3), autonomously self-heals rapidly, and measures dynamic motions reliably (no drift, non-hysteric).6 The combination is achieved through both multi-strength dynamic bond molecular design and structural engineering. To achieve a fast and strong self-healing material, hydrogen bonding for fast self-healing and aromatic disulfide bond for autonomous and strong self-healing are combined in the system. To address hysteresis and drift problems under cyclic loading caused by the viscoelasticity of dynamic bonds, sPUU adopts a wavy shape to leverage structural compliance to realize entirely elastic response, enabling reliable dynamic sensing performance for robotic motion feedback. The optical sensor could detect damage, as well as recover signal from severe damages, such as multiple cuts or material removal (punctures). Demonstrated on a soft quadruped, the self-healing optical sensor enables robotic intelligence towards damage, where it senses injury, self-heals, and adapts to the adverse environment. Up to date, efforts are progressively devoted to self-healing robots with material innovation that can recover and reuse even under harsh environments.43,44
Fig. 4 Biodegradable and recyclable materials and mechanisms. (a) Classification of biodegradable polymers.45 Right: The synthetic process of a bio-composite with delignified wood and gelatin hydrogel to exhibit a wide range of mechanical strength (1.2–18.3 MPa) and stiffness (170–1455 MPa) that can be suitable matrix for soft machines.54 Reproduced from ref. 45; Copyright 2021, John Wiley & Sons; reproduced from ref. 54; Copyright 2023, Elsevier. (b) Recycling enabled by dynamic covalent bonds. Left: Two distinct exchange (dissociative & associative) pathways.55 Right: Malleable thermoset epoxy network due to transesterification triggered by heating and catalyst.56 Reproduced from ref. 55; Copyright 2019, American Chemical Society. Reproduced from ref. 56; Copyright 2011, the American Association for the Advancement of Science. (c) Chemical upcycle of polyurethane foams into reconfigurable elastomers and 3D printable resins with the addition of various network reforming monomers during upcycle process.4 Reproduced from ref. 4; Copyright 2023, Springer Nature. |
In regards of degradable soft actuators and sensors, biodegradable elastomers are ideal material substrates with programmable degradation performance and mechanical properties.57 Naturally derived polymers like gelatin, alginate and cellulose offer the advantage of renewable sources and cytobiocompatibility with lower carbon footprints. Fig. 4a demonstrates that an anisotropic bio-composite with combination of different bio-based matrix (delignified wood and gelatine hydrogel) was synthesized across a broad strength and stiffness range (1.2–18.3 MPa and 170–1455 MPa, respectively),54 which would be a capable material for building biodegradable soft machines. Beyond, synthetic elastomers that have cleavable bonds such as ester, amide and anhydrides in the backbones can undergo enzymatic or hydrolytic degradation. Among them, thermoplastic elastomers are physically cross-linked that polymer chains have enough mobility to flow above glass transition temperature (Tg) or melting temperature (Tm), which offers good (re)processability, yet unreliable mechanical performance with time and temperature. In comparison, thermoset elastomers with chemically cross-linked network enables reliable and stable functions, which in turn loss processability once cured. It is worthwhile to note that synthetic elastomers with biodegradability provide highly programmability of mechanical, optical and dielectric properties for robotic applications from the bottom-up micromolecular synthesis.
In contrast to degradation, recycling allows materials to be cycled and reused at the end-of-life. Physical recycle involves mechanical process (e.g., grinding, shredding, compressing). The process is generally limited to thermoplastic resins and undergoes through high shear force, high temperature and high pressure, which unavoidably leads to polymer chain breakage with significantly decreased qualities and properties compared to the virgin material.58 By contrast, chemical recycling allows thermoset to become malleable by incorporating dynamic covalent bonds without markedly degradation.59 Regarding the exchange mechanism, two types (dissociation and association) of dynamic bonds are illustrated, where the distinction is characterized by crosslinking density during exchange55 (Fig. 4b). For dissociative bonds such as Diels–Alder adducts and hindered ureas, crosslinking density decreases as a result of the sequential bond breakage and reformation process in the exchange reaction; associative exchange (transesterification, olefin metathesis and dioxaborolane) maintains constant crosslinking density through the formation of intermediate. Pioneered by Leibler's team, thermoset epoxy can be reprocessed via dynamic ester bonds exchange.56 The epoxy materials with mechanical strength 55 MPa are insoluble and robust at room temperature, however reshaped and reprocessed at high temperature (>200 °C) enabled by transesterification under catalysts. The key feature of the malleable material is that it exhibits Arrhenius-like gradual viscosity variations like vitreous silica. Therefore, “Vitrimer” is defined to distinguish these materials from common polymers whose viscosity varies abruptly near the glass transition.60 This offers significant advantages that reshape programming can be proceeded in a local region to achieve sophisticated shapes, which unleashes limits from conventional shaping moulds. The intrinsic reshape and recycle characters of vitrimers initiate unexplored opportunities to sustainable robots.
Beyond recycling, upcycling that transforms unwanted waste into materials with higher quality or value have attracted continuous attention.61,62 It allows upcycled materials to exhibit superior properties that could be endowed with new functionalities. For example, commodity polyurethane foams have been demonstrated to chemically upcycle into reconfigurable tough elastomers and high-performance 3D photo-printable resins4 (Fig. 4c). In this process, polyurethane waste was chemically fragmented into a dissolvable mixture triggered by heating (120 °C) and catalyst, which can be transformed into high value products with the addition of various network reforming additives. Upcycled polyurethane elastomers exhibit a mechanical strength of 22 MPa and a toughness of 67 MJ m−3, the remarkable improvement to the directly compression-moulded films with <5 MPa mechanical strength and <2 MJ m−3 toughness. Notably, the underlying upcycle mechanism that depolymerize urethane, urea and biuret bonds into functional alcohol and amine groups could be versatile to other polyurethane polymers. With various additives, upcycled materials could be programmed with new functionalities, showing promise as raw materials for next-generation upcycled robots.
Fig. 5 Biodegradable and recyclable actuators and sensors. (a) Gelatin-based biogels with outstanding elasticity (∼10−1 MPa of mechanical strength and ∼200% of stretchability) and fully degradation (<10 days in wastewater) for soft actuators and electronics.5 Reproduced from ref. 5; Copyright 2020, Springer Nature. (b) Electrohydraulic actuators systemically built from various biodegradable materials that involves NaCl-infused gelatin as electrodes, vegetable oils as liquid dielectrics and polylactic acid PLA & bio-polyester as insulating layer exhibit good endurance more than 100000 cycles and comparable actuation performance to nonbiodegradable counterparts.8 Reproduced from ref. 8; Copyright 2023, the American Association for the Advancement of Science. (c) Recyclable actuators based on dynamic Diels–Alder bonds. The recycle process proceeds via solvent casting upon heating (65 °C).9 Reproduced from ref. 9; Copyright 2017, the American Association for the Advancement of Science. (d) Recyclable electronics based on transamination and the recycle mechanism can go back into monomers that allows full restore of sensing function before and after recycle.66 Reproduced from ref. 66; Copyright 2018, the American Association for the Advancement of Science. |
Dynamic covalent bonds were well studied for recyclability. It is not surprising that self-healing can be achieved simultaneously, due to the same underlying mechanism for the breakage and reformation of dynamic bonds. We note that the requirement of recyclability is more demanding than self-healing, as fully flowability of bulk materials is essential and therefore high pressure (>10° GPa)/plenty of solvents is sometimes necessary to accelerate the mobility of polymer chain. In comparison, self-healing proceeds in a local area (crack or scrape surface) where chain mobility in the bulk solid is sufficient to allow chain interfusion across the damages surface. In a self-healing and recyclable soft pneumatic actuator, Diels–Alder bonds dissolved in solvents enabled material recyclability by shifting the equilibrium towards reactants upon heating9 (Fig. 5c). However, the recycled material had a slight drop in modulus due to undesired maleimide homopolymerization during the recycling solvent-cast process with heating. The decrease in mechanical properties is not rare, resulted from unwanted side-reaction during recycle process within high temperature and pressure.67 To address the issue, closed-loop recycle without loss of properties was achieved that can convert synthetic material into raw monomers.68,69 Anastasaki et al. demonstrated reversible addition–fragmentation chain-transfer (RAFT) polymerization that allows RAFT polymethacrylates to depolymerize back to monomers. Herein, RAFT polymers can generate chain-end radicals to trigger unzipping depolymerization polymers at 120 °C.68 The novel approach provides intriguing aspects towards close-loop recyclable robotic materials.
Besides biodegradable and recyclable actuators, electronics that can sense multiple signals (e.g., strain, temperature and humidity) are directly built from a biodegradable gel5 to decompose at the-end-of life. Biogels with different elasticity (1.4, 0.4 and 0.2 MPa) were assembled into graded-modulus bio-matrix that accommodates patterned electrical sensors. Since material viscoelasticity determines sensor performance and material modulus & stretchability determines compatibility with soft actuators or biological tissues, elasticity and adequate stretchability are important parameters in designing material matrix with biodegradable polymers. Fig. 5d demonstrates a fully recyclable electronic device fabricated from dynamic polyimine.66 The intrinsic transamination allows polyimine to depolymerize into monomers with the addition of primary amines. The recycled solution can be reused to fabricate new electronics by proportionally added monomers and silver nanoparticles. This recycling mechanism that depolymerizes the polymer back to only monomers enables full restore of sensing function before and after recycle.70 However, the polyimine matrix has a high modulus (∼10° GPa) and low stretchability (<5%) that could easily fail under large movements when used as electronic skin. Increasing efforts are dedicated to dynamic chemistry that should be readily accessible for robotic materials and avoid obvious performance reduction before and after recycling. Rather than seeking full restore of performance during recycle, upcycle represents a novel approach that materials can be reprocessed into value-added products with superior function. Distinguished from conventional recycling, upcycling makes it possible to refunction commodity plastics with higher value. Future work needs extensive studies on developing more mild and economic methods for upcycle.71 Undoubtedly, this advance would accelerate soft robots towards further sustainability with the bottom-up material innovation.
Alternatively, sustainable energy harvesting and storage possibilities in the form of embodied energy may present exciting opportunities. The term “Robotic Embodied Energy”, coined by Shepherd et al., describes the design philosophy that the energy storage module, instead of being a stand-alone module, merges with another functional/structural module and distributedly powers local functions.74 While the original purpose for this design principle is to optimize robotic endurance and operation time, interesting potentials arise for sustainable energy source—if energy harvesting and storage schemes could be embedded in the sustainable material construct of a soft robot, then we would be one big step closer to an entirely sustainable robotic system.
Material innovations would drive this direction of research, and examples of triboelectric nanogenerators and living materials could already show early signs for this vision. Triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG) harvests mechanical energy (touching, rotation, twisting and etc.) into electricity by coupling triboelectric effect and electrostatic induction75 (Fig. 6a). Here, electricity with a peak output power density of ∼10.4 mW cm−3 is generated through PET & Kapton as triboelectric layers and Au alloy as electrodes. Under mechanical compression such as bending, PET is positively charged and Kapton is equally negative-charged due to electrostatic effect, leading to the formation of triboelectric potential interface that drives the flow of charges to generate electricity. Numerous endeavors have been dedicated to increase the output power of TENG, where mainly two approaches including modification of triboelectric materials and optimization of effective contact surface are studied to achieve several tens of mW cm−2 for output energy.76 It is worth noting that synthetic polymers such as PDMS, PTFE, Nylon and PET are commonly used as triboelectric materials to fabricate flexible TENG, which provides highly promise to accommodate and harvest mechanical motions into energy for use as self-powered soft robotic systems. Furthermore, sustainable TENG based on recycled materials such as PET recycled from waste bottles, as well as bio-based polymers including cellulose, silk and lignin are explored to achieve recyclability and biodegradability.77 An interesting example is that dynamic bonds are introduced into TENG to endow self-healing ability,78,79 which shows highly sustainable prospect for robotic application. For instance, vitrimer based TENG was achieved by incorporating dynamic disulfide bonds to exhibit self-healing and shape adaptability as self-powered electronics79 (Fig. 6b). In regards of robotic application, the electricity output of TENG should be sufficient and reliable to power the actuating/sensing function of robots. Ongoing research are devoted to developing and integrating TENG with high efficiency and reliability towards practical applications.
Fig. 6 Renewable energy source and living materials for soft robots towards fully sustainability. (a) Schematic process of triboelectric nanogenerator by converting mechanical energy (bending) into electricity with a peak output power density of ∼10.4 mW cm−3.75 Reproduced from ref. 75; Copyright 2012, Elsevier. (b) A vitrimer based triboelectric nanogenerator (VTENG). Left: The mechanism for self-healing based on dynamic disulphide bonds exchange (upper), the schematic process of VTENG fabrication (bottom). Right: Self-powered tactile sensor built from VTENG to give real-time feedback where badminton falls.79 Reproduced from ref. 79; Copyright 2018, John Wiley & Sons. (c) 3D printable hydrogel with living microorganisms embedded in as living materials towards engineering application. Upper: Scheme shows the printed structure can grow and regenerate by harvesting nutrients from environments. Bottom: Living hydrogels as robotic materials for soft gripper and untethered rolling robot.80 Reproduced from ref. 80; Copyright 2022, Springer Nature. |
Radically different from renewable energy source, living materials that harvest nutrients directly from environment81 to support operation could unleash new possibility of robotics towards further sustainability. The key feature is to bring life into materials that can grow, regenerate and adapt to complex environment. Engineered living materials are a flourishing field of smart materials that leverage the unique properties (e.g., growth, metabolism, sensing, regeneration) of the biological processes in living organisms to realize responsive or active functions.82 A variety of microorganisms, ranging from bacteria, fungi, algae to animal cells have been integrated into scaffold/matrix materials such as silk, hydrogels, polymers, and concrete, while the active/responsive material properties could be regulated by nutrient supply. These features offer interesting possibilities for their use as sustainable robotic materials, as soft robots built with living materials could scavenge nutrients from the environment as energy sources to support its operation. While the rapidly expanding field of biohybrid robotic actuators have demonstrated a plurality of mechanisms to exploit living cells and tissues for actuation,83 the emphasize has been on improving soft actuator performances (e.g., force, stroke, efficiency, etc.) and the sustainability aspect has been rarely discussed. A recent example of 3D printed mycelium-hydrogel complex material shed light on living soft robot for sustainability considerations. Exploring nutrient regulation in 3D hydrogel scaffold to control exploratory and exploitation strategies in fungal mycelia, Studart et al. achieved emerging adaptive behavior of self-repair, regenerate, and adapt to fulfill an engineering function in the living material (Fig. 6c).80 Demonstrated as the robotic skin of a gripper and a rolling robot, mycelium-hydrogel exhibits mechanical robustness, softness, self-healing and waterproof functions of interest to robotic applications. It is worthwhile to note that from the sustainability aspect, the mycelium living material enables self-healing, and the bio-based material could be potentially adapted to allow biodegradability. The ability to 3D print such living material presents a first step to create complex structures with adaptive properties for advanced robotic materials. To realize the embodied sustainable energy for biohybrid robots, substantial future research would need to look into how such adaptive structures could scavenge nutrients from the environment, and how the living material's growth/response, regulated by the nutrients, could be translated into meaningful robotic actuation.
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