TY - JOUR
T1 - Self-regulated non-reciprocal motions in single-material microstructures
AU - Li, Shucong
AU - Lerch, Michael M.
AU - Waters, James T.
AU - Deng, Bolei
AU - Martens, Reese S.
AU - Yao, Yuxing
AU - Kim, Do Yoon
AU - Bertoldi, Katia
AU - Grinthal, Alison
AU - Balazs, Anna C.
AU - Aizenberg, Joanna
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was primarily supported by the US Army Research Office, under grant number W911NF-17-1-0351. K.B. and B.D. were supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) through the Harvard University Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC) under award DMR-2011754. M.M.L. was supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO, Rubicon Fellowship 019.182EN.027). Microfabrication and scanning electron microscopy were performed at the Center for Nanoscale Systems (CNS) at Harvard, a member of the National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure Network (NNCI), supported by the NSF ECCS award no. 1541959. We thank M. Aizenberg, M. Pilz Da Cunha, M. Liu, A. Chen and Y. Zhao for discussions.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
PY - 2022/5/5
Y1 - 2022/5/5
N2 - Living cilia stir, sweep and steer via swirling strokes of complex bending and twisting, paired with distinct reverse arcs. Efforts to mimic such dynamics synthetically rely on multimaterial designs but face limits to programming arbitrary motions or diverse behaviours in one structure. Here we show how diverse, complex, non-reciprocal, stroke-like trajectories emerge in a single-material system through self-regulation. When a micropost composed of photoresponsive liquid crystal elastomer with mesogens aligned oblique to the structure axis is exposed to a static light source, dynamic dances evolve as light initiates a travelling order-to-disorder transition front, transiently turning the structure into a complex evolving bimorph that twists and bends via multilevel opto-chemo-mechanical feedback. As captured by our theoretical model, the travelling front continuously reorients the molecular, geometric and illumination axes relative to each other, yielding pathways composed from series of twisting, bending, photophobic and phototropic motions. Guided by the model, here we choreograph a wide range of trajectories by tailoring parameters, including illumination angle, light intensity, molecular anisotropy, microstructure geometry, temperature and irradiation intervals and duration. We further show how this opto-chemo-mechanical self-regulation serves as a foundation for creating self-organizing deformation patterns in closely spaced microstructure arrays via light-mediated interpost communication, as well as complex motions of jointed microstructures, with broad implications for autonomous multimodal actuators in areas such as soft robotics, biomedical devices and energy transduction materials, and for fundamental understanding of self-regulated systems.
AB - Living cilia stir, sweep and steer via swirling strokes of complex bending and twisting, paired with distinct reverse arcs. Efforts to mimic such dynamics synthetically rely on multimaterial designs but face limits to programming arbitrary motions or diverse behaviours in one structure. Here we show how diverse, complex, non-reciprocal, stroke-like trajectories emerge in a single-material system through self-regulation. When a micropost composed of photoresponsive liquid crystal elastomer with mesogens aligned oblique to the structure axis is exposed to a static light source, dynamic dances evolve as light initiates a travelling order-to-disorder transition front, transiently turning the structure into a complex evolving bimorph that twists and bends via multilevel opto-chemo-mechanical feedback. As captured by our theoretical model, the travelling front continuously reorients the molecular, geometric and illumination axes relative to each other, yielding pathways composed from series of twisting, bending, photophobic and phototropic motions. Guided by the model, here we choreograph a wide range of trajectories by tailoring parameters, including illumination angle, light intensity, molecular anisotropy, microstructure geometry, temperature and irradiation intervals and duration. We further show how this opto-chemo-mechanical self-regulation serves as a foundation for creating self-organizing deformation patterns in closely spaced microstructure arrays via light-mediated interpost communication, as well as complex motions of jointed microstructures, with broad implications for autonomous multimodal actuators in areas such as soft robotics, biomedical devices and energy transduction materials, and for fundamental understanding of self-regulated systems.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85129446450&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41586-022-04561-z
DO - 10.1038/s41586-022-04561-z
M3 - Article
C2 - 35508775
AN - SCOPUS:85129446450
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 605
SP - 76
EP - 83
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 7908
ER -