• About
  • Top Stories
  • Topics

    Green Energy News

    Solar News
    Hydrogen News
    Nuclear News
    Wind News
    Hydropower News

    Transportation News

    Electric Vehicle (EV) News
    Fuel Cell News
    Aviation News
    Public Transit News
    Commercial / Shipping News

    Sustainable Agriculture News

    Biomass Energy News
    Biofuel News
    Agtech News

    Utility News

    Smart Meter News
    Energy Storage News
    Demand Response News

    Environment News

    Recycling News
    Water News
    Pollution News

    Smart Cities News

    Energy Efficiency News
    Internet of Things (IoT) News

    Climate News

    Decarbonization News
    Climate Tech News

    Green Tech Innovation News

    Robotics News
    Nanotech News
    Batteries

  • Contact
No Results
View all Results
  • About
  • Top Stories
  • Topics

    Green Energy News

    Solar News
    Hydrogen News
    Nuclear News
    Wind News
    Hydropower News

    Transportation News

    Electric Vehicle (EV) News
    Fuel Cell News
    Aviation News
    Public Transit News
    Commercial / Shipping News

    Sustainable Agriculture News

    Biomass Energy News
    Biofuel News
    Agtech News

    Utility News

    Smart Meter News
    Energy Storage News
    Demand Response News

    Environment News

    Recycling News
    Water News
    Pollution News

    Smart Cities News

    Energy Efficiency News
    Internet of Things (IoT) News

    Climate News

    Decarbonization News
    Climate Tech News

    Green Tech Innovation News

    Robotics News
    Nanotech News
    Batteries

  • Contact
No Results
View all Results
Home Green Tech Innovation News Robotics News

Engineers develop tiny robot that moves without electricity

Katie Pyzyk by Katie Pyzyk
May 26, 2022
The tiny walking robot stands on the edge of a coin. Credit: Northwestern University

The tiny walking robot stands on the edge of a coin. Credit: Northwestern University

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Electronic devices and their components are becoming smaller and smaller as technology advances. Now, Northwestern University engineers have created what they’re calling the smallest-ever, remote-controlled walking robot.

At only half a millimeter wide, the tiny robot crabs are smaller than a flea. They walk, crawl, bend, twist, and jump. 

The robot is not powered by electricity or complicated hardware. Rather, the power and movement comes from phase changes with the device’s shape-memory alloy material.

The device reverts to its “remembered” shape when heated. The Northwestern researchers used a scanned laser beam to heat different parts of the robot’s body. As the robot’s body changes phases under different temperatures, it moves. In this case, the laser is the “remote control” and determines the robot’s motion and walking direction.

“Our technology enables a variety of controlled motion modalities and can walk with an average speed of half its body length per second,” Yonggang Huang, mechanical engineering and civil and environmental engineering professor, said in a news release. “This is very challenging to achieve at such small scales for terrestrial robots.”

The robot manufacturing technique that the researchers introduced eight years ago can be used to develop a variety of differently shaped and sized devices. This version is a crab because of a “creative whim” that amused the researchers’ students. Similar versions have resembled inchworms, crickets, and beetles. 

Last year, these researchers introduced a tiny, winged, motorless microchip that can fly. Its applications include environmental monitoring to detect pollution.

The new crab robot could perform tasks inside confined spaces, especially for applications where batteries or electricity are less practical. For example, future versions could prove useful during surgeries to stop internal bleeding or clear clogged arteries.

Centered is your cleantech news source for the Midwest

Subscribe to receive free weekday news updates



    Previous Post

    Blending in: New process creates blended material for more efficient technologies

    Next Post

    Fleets pump the brakes on new tech adoption amid economic uncertainty

    Related News

    An illustration, where the pinkish area is activated by light, demonstrates an example of how liquid crystals could be used to perform computations.

    Scientists manipulate ‘liquid crystals’ to uncover new computing and robotics possibilities

    by Katie Pyzyk
    March 4, 2022
    0

    Research by scientists at Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Chicago could come in handy for wearable electronics and soft robots.

    Swarming nanorobots

    How robots modeled after insects can work harder and smarter

    by Katie Pyzyk
    October 21, 2021
    0

    The phrase “get back to nature” may not evoke images of high-tech innovations. But some Midwestern researchers are creating better robots by...

    Next Post
    A recent report examined commercial fleets’ willingness to adopt emerging and transformative vehicle technologies. Credit: Tom Fisk / Creative Commons

    Fleets pump the brakes on new tech adoption amid economic uncertainty

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Centered is your cleantech news source for the Midwest

    Subscribe to receive free weekday news updates



      Trending News

      A rendering illustrates kW River's hydroelectric turbines.

      Chasing waterfalls: Ohio startup’s ‘aesthetically invisible’ design aims to modernize hydropower

      September 28, 2021
      Rocking the boat: Indiana waste plastics processor plans to convert boat wrap to fuel

      Rocking the boat: Indiana waste plastics processor plans to convert boat wrap to fuel

      July 7, 2020
      Looking through the passenger window of a stopped vehicle, a driver with one hand on the steering wheel and another on the trackpad of a laptop mounted on the dashboard.

      Federal boost helps tech race from lab to car

      April 7, 2021

      Popular Topics

      • Green Tech Innovation News
      • Transportation News
      • Green Energy News
      • Environment News
      • Electric Vehicle (EV) News
      • Water News
      • Batteries
      • Sustainable Agriculture News
      • Solar News
      • Energy Efficiency
      • Climate News
      • Smart Cities News
      • Agtech News
      • Decarbonization News
      • Recycling News
      • Utility News
      • Hydrogen News
      • Wind News
      • Biofuel News
      • Nanotech News
      • Electrical Grid News
      • Aviation News
      • Biomass Energy News
      • Robotics News
      • Energy Storage News
      • Pollution News
      • Nuclear News
      • Commercial / Shipping News
      • Climate Tech News
      • Hydropower News
      • Fuel Cell News
      • Smart Meter News
      • Internet of Things (IoT) News
      Centered



      © 2022 Centered. All Rights Reserved.

      Centered is a publication of the Energy News Network, in partnership with the Illinois Science and Energy Innovation Foundation.

      • Privacy
      • Terms of Use
      No Results
      View all Results
      • About
      • Top Stories
      • Topics
        • Green Energy News
        • Transportation News
        • Sustainable Agriculture News
        • Electrical Grid News
        • Environment News
        • Smart Cities News
        • Climate News
        • Green Tech Innovation News
      • Contact

      Centered. All Rights Reserved.

      Centered is your cleantech news source for the Midwest

      Subscribe to receive a free daily roundup of underreported technology stories from around the region.



        Contact Us