fresh bytes
Subscribe Now

Robotic fabric acts like a muscle, makes foam blocks wriggle

foamd321.jpg

When we think about robotics, we don’t typically think about a lump of inert foam — but with the right clothing, it counts. Researchers at Purdue University are developing a robotic fabric that can be used to make so-called “soft” robots out of foam and other lightweight materials. The team has embedded fabric with a flexible polymer that changes shape and rigidity when heated, allowing it to be contracted or relaxed at will. Wrap a specifically assigned swatch of this cloth around a piece of foam, and it can be coaxed into bending, wriggling or moving in specific ways. “We will be able to design reboots on the fly,” Purdue University’s Rebecca Kramer says. “Anything can be a robot because all of the robotic technology is in the fabric or skin.”

The material could conceivably be used in space missions, as an easy means to build exploration robots with cheap, lightweight material that can be transported easily.
via Engadget

Continue reading

Image: Purdue University / Rebecca Kramer 

Leave a Reply

featured blogs
Feb 6, 2026
In which we meet a super-sized Arduino Uno that is making me drool with desire....

featured chalk talk

Speed Matters: Methods and Methodologies to Get the Most Performance
In this episode of Chalk Talk, Ludovic Jacomme from Siemens and Amelia Dalton investigate the benefits that Siemens Veloce proFPGA CS can bring to your next FPGA-based prototyping project and how you can take advantage of this solution today.
Jan 19, 2026
34,578 views