4.7 Article

Harnessing Soft Elasticity of Liquid Crystal Elastomers to Achieve Low Voltage Driven Actuation

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS TECHNOLOGIES
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/admt.202201969

Keywords

actuators; artificial muscles; dielectric elastomers; liquid crystal elastomers

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In this work, a new class of dielectric elastomer actuators using liquid crystal elastomers (DLCEs) is reported. The soft elasticity of DLCEs and their high dielectric constant are utilized to reduce actuation voltage. Freestanding DLCE thin film actuators are fabricated, which generate large actuation strains at a significantly lower input voltage compared to typical dielectric elastomers actuators. This allows for the development of a soft tunable bilayer DE lens with a 21% focal length variation.
Dielectric elastomers (DE) are soft electromechanical transducers that can generate large, rapid, and reversible deformation under an electric field. Despite being one of the leading candidates for soft actuators, the widespread applications of dielectric elastomers are restricted by the high voltage requirement (1-10 kV) for thin film DEs, which increases the system complexity and pose a potential safety threat for humans. In this work, a new class of dielectric elastomer actuators using liquid crystal elastomers (DLCEs) is reported. Soft elasticity of DLCEs and the high dielectric constant are utilized to reduce the actuation voltage. Freestanding DLCE thin film actuators (approximate to 20 mu m) are fabricated, which can generate large actuation strains (approximate to 88%) at 400 V, an input voltage almost one order of magnitude lower compared to typical dielectric elastomers actuators. This allows to develop a soft tunable bilayer DE lens, which can achieve a 21% focal length variation at 500 V.

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