Christoph Keplinger: The artificial muscles that will power robots of the future
Christoph Keplinger aims to fundamentally challenge current limitations of robotic hardware, combining soft matter physics and chemistry with advanced engineering technologies to create a new generation of lifelike robots. Full bio
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for disaster response
of the winning robot, HUBO.
is a state-of-the-art robot
all that different
in the competition,
well, very robotic.
mechanical structures
rigid electric motors.
with the brains of robots,
way faster than HUBO.
on monkey bars with ease,
human-like robot could do.
of soft and deformable materials
efficiency and by the soft materials
the key idea of a new field of research
and collaborators around the world
inspired by muscle and skin
of the organisms found in nature.
by biological muscle.
a bit like Arnie, the Terminator.
is a true masterpiece of evolution.
with sensory neurons
and the environment.
to power the high-speed wings
to move an elephant;
to be used in the extremely versatile arms
its entire body through tiny holes.
what muscles are for animals:
and interaction with the world.
as the real thing,
people have tried for many decades
capabilities of muscle,
publications on artificial muscle,
of dielectric bodies
Wilhelm Röntgen.
as the discoverer of the X-ray.
we used a pair of needles.
a transparent piece of rubber
onto a plastic frame.
is not a practical way
got me hooked on the topic.
to build artificial muscles
for real-world applications.
on a number of different technologies
that are hard to overcome.
the high speed and efficiency
of soft, fluidic actuators.
really old science in a new way.
filled with oil,
up in between the two plates,
much better than I expected.
outstanding team of students,
called HASEL artificial muscles.
to pick up a raspberry
like real muscle.
faster than the real thing.
to deliver large forces.
a gallon filled with water.
self-sense their position.
for very precise movement,
very fluidic, muscle-like movement
to shoot up a ball into the air.
can be made invisible.
easily available materials.
and fill them with olive oil.
as much as you can.
and place it on one side of the bag.
you see the bag contract.
is easy to control.
you get a small contraction.
we get a medium contraction.
you get a large contraction.
is to replace the force of your hand
self-healing electrostatic actuators."
called Peano-HASEL actuators,
such as our Ziploc bag,
such as olive oil,
on one side of the pouch.
that looks more like a muscle fiber,
starts acting on the liquid.
Peano-HASEL actuator
when voltage is applied.
take a more cylindrical shape,
such muscle fibers next to each other
even more like a muscle
in cross section.
that's about 200 times heavier
called quadrant donut HASELs
reaching superhuman speeds.
to jump off the ground.
to become the first technology
of biological muscle
with large-scale manufacturing.
We are just getting started.
drastically improve performance,
to reach a level of performance
traditional rigid electric motors.
of HASEL for bio-inspired robotics,
and elephant trunks,
soft continuum actuators
to the capabilities of the real thing.
about the practical applications
of more lifelike prosthetics
parts of their bodies.
driving a prosthetic finger.
our bodies with robotic parts.
more dependent on others
such as using the restroom alone,
they're becoming a burden.
to enhance and restore
maintain autonomy
"robotics for antiaging"
rigid counterparts,
near people and help us at home.
We're just getting started.
from many different backgrounds
inspired by nature.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Christoph Keplinger - Roboticist, mechanical engineerChristoph Keplinger aims to fundamentally challenge current limitations of robotic hardware, combining soft matter physics and chemistry with advanced engineering technologies to create a new generation of lifelike robots.
Why you should listen
Robots today rely on rigid components and electric motors that use metal and magnets, making them heavy, unsafe near humans, expensive and ill-suited for unpredictable environments. Nature, in contrast, makes extensive use of soft materials such as muscles and skin and has produced organisms that drastically outperform robots in terms of agility, dexterity and adaptability. Christoph Keplinger aims to fundamentally challenge current limitations of robotic hardware, using an interdisciplinary approach that synergizes concepts from soft matter physics and chemistry with advanced engineering technologies to introduce intelligent materials systems for a new generation of life-like robots.
A major theme of Keplinger's research is the development of new classes of actuators -- a key component of all robotic systems -- that replicate the sweeping success of biological muscle, a masterpiece of evolution. He is the principal inventor of HASEL artificial muscles, a new class of high-performance muscle-mimetic actuators for use in next-generation robots that replicate the vast capabilities of biological systems. In 2018 he cofounded Artimus Robotics to commercialize the technology.
Originally from Austria, Keplinger studied physics at the Johannes Kepler University Linz before moving to the US to research mechanics and chemistry at Harvard. He is an assistant professor of mechanical engineering and a fellow of the Materials Science and Engineering Program at the University of Colorado Boulder, where he leads a highly interdisciplinary research group that works on soft robotics, energy harvesting and functional polymers. His work has been published in Science Magazine, among others, and highlighted in popular outlets such as National Geographic. Keplinger he has received prestigious awards including a 2017 Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering.
Christoph Keplinger | Speaker | TED.com