Animated origami material developed

Researchers at McGill University have developed ultra-thin materials that can be programmed to move, fold and reshape themselves like animated origami.

They open the door to softer, safer and more adaptable robots that could be used in medical tools that gently move inside the body, wearable devices that change shape on the skin or smart packaging that reacts to its environment.

Two related studies demonstrate how these materials can be made at scale, programmed to change shape and controlled either by humidity or magnetic fields.


Abstract photo of folded sheets of grey material

“Graphene oxide films are highly promising for next-generation soft robots and adaptive actuators, yet their real-world deployment remains limited because they are brittle, challenging to manufacture at scale and unable to generate complex or programmable motion,” said Cerruti. An actuator converts energy into motion to produce controlled movement or functionality.


The team created GO films that are strong and flexible. These materials are well suited for use in soft robots, which need to be lightweight, safe around people and capable of moving in complex ways without heavy motors or rigid parts.

The researchers used the GO films to create structures that may respond to everyday environmental conditions. In the first study, the origami-like structure opens when exposed to humidity and closes again as it dries. In the second study, similar kinds of shapes were combined with tiny magnetic particles so they can be remotely steered using a magnet, without wires or batteries.

The graphene oxide layer’s inherent ability to conduct electricity in a way that changes as the material bends allows the folded structures to sense their own movement, the researchers found. This allows the structures to act simultaneously as actuators that move and sensors that measure movement.

“These advances enable robust, reconfigurable and multifunctional GO metamaterials capable of complex motion, user-defined shape changes, integrated sensing and real-time feedback, marking the emergence of the first reconfigurable sensoriactuator metamaterials” Akbarzadeh said.

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David Manners

David Manners

David Manners has more than forty-years experience writing about the electronics industry, its major trends and leading players. As well as writing business, components and research news, he is the author of the site's most popular blog, Mannerisms. This features series of posts such as Fables, Markets, Shenanigans, and Memory Lanes, across a wide range of topics.

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