変形可能な人工筋肉を実現する3Dプリント技術を開発(Toward Artificial Muscles That Bend and Twist on Demand)

2026-04-29 ハーバード大学

ハーバード大学の研究チームは、曲げやねじりなど複雑な動作を自在に制御できる人工筋肉材料を開発した。新材料は柔軟な構造と内部の駆動機構を組み合わせることで、従来より多様で精密な変形を実現し、外部刺激に応じて複数の動きを同時に発現できる。これによりロボットの動作自由度や適応性が向上し、生体に近い滑らかな運動が可能となる。将来的にはソフトロボティクスや医療デバイスへの応用が期待され、人工筋肉の設計指針として重要な成果と位置づけられる。

<関連情報>

プログラム可能な形状変化を備えたアクティブ・パッシブフィラメントおよび格子構造の回転式3Dプリント Rotational 3D printing of active–passive filaments and lattices with programmable shape morphing

Mustafa K. Abdelrahman, Jackson K. Wilt, Yeonsu Jung, +5 , and Jennifer A. Lewis
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Published:April 22, 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2537250123

変形可能な人工筋肉を実現する3Dプリント技術を開発(Toward Artificial Muscles That Bend and Twist on Demand)

Significance

Natural filaments have exceptional control over curvature and twist enabled by directional responses embedded within their internal structure. To emulate this complex behavior, we use rotational multimaterial 3D printing (RM-3DP) to create composite fibers composed of active liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs) and passive elastomers. By controlling the rotation rate on-the-fly during printing, one can fabricate Janus filaments and lattices with spatially programmable composition, alignment, and shape-morphing behavior, including reversible bending, coiling, and twisting when thermally cycled above and below their nematic-to-isotropic transition temperature. A theoretical and computational framework corroborates our experimental findings and paves the way for a quantitative framework to understand and design shape-morphing filaments and lattices.

Abstract

Natural filaments, such as proteins, plant tendrils, octopus tentacles, and elephant trunks, can transform into arbitrary three-dimensional shapes that carry out vital functions. Their shape-morphing behavior arises from intricate patterning of active and passive regions, which are difficult to replicate in synthetic matter. Here, we introduce a filament-centric strategy for programmable shape morphing in which intrinsic curvature and twist are directly encoded within multimaterial elastomeric filaments during fabrication. By harnessing rotational multimaterial 3D printing, we directly prescribe the filament’s natural curvature–twist field κ(s) through controlled material distribution and helical liquid crystal mesogen alignment. When heated above their nematic-to-isotropic transition temperature (TNI), the helically aligned liquid crystal elastomer regions contract along their local director field, while passive regions remain essentially unchanged. This approach enables independent control of bending and torsion at every cross-section along the filament centerline: the principal natural curvatures of the filament along two orthogonal axes as well as the local twist. Next, we printed architected lattices composed of unit cells formed by sinusoidal filaments that either reversibly contract, expand, or exhibit out-of-plane deformations. Discrete elastic rod simulations of Janus filaments with different natural curvatures and twist, which are interconnected within the printed lattices, allow accurate prediction of their observed shape-morphing behavior. By integrating active–passive elastomers, additive manufacturing, and computational modeling, we have created shape-morphing matter with complex programmable responses for applications that rely on adaptive, robotic, or deployable architectures.

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