Monday, March 23, 2009

These Carbon Nanotube Muscles Are 30 Times Stronger Than Human Muscles

    via Gizmodo by Brian Lam on 3/19/09

    These next gen carbon nanotube muscles have "diamond-like" stiffness side to side, but are as flexible as rubber when moved perpendicularly. When voltage is applied to the structures, they contract with a pulling force 30 times the force per unit of human muscles.

    They're also quicker. A human's muscle fibers can contract 10% per second, but these can contract 40,000 percent.

    I had no idea synthetic muscles materials have come so far. A few years ago, when I was covering JPL's robotic arm wrestling challenge for
     Wired, the materials had a fraction of the potential of organic muscles. [Wired]

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