Why bother to design your own robots when you can just reuse what nature created?
This was the thought process behind a research project from engineers at Rice University who successfully transformed dead spiders into robotic gripping claws. The scientists have dubbed their new area of research ānecroboticsā and say it could create cheap, effective, and biodegradable alternatives to current robotic systems.
So why spiders? Well, while humans move their limbs using pairs of antagonistic muscles, like biceps and triceps, spidersā legs contain only a single flexor muscle that draws the leg inward. This is opposed by a hydraulic system: a chamber in the center of the spiderās body (known as a prosoma) pushes out fluid to open the leg, with separate valves allowing the animal to control each limb independently. Incidentally, this is why spiders always curl up when they die; thereās no pressure in the system to oppose the legsā flexor muscles.
Armed with this knowledge, the team from Rice University discovered they could artificially operate this hydraulic system simply by sticking a needle into a dead spiderās prosoma, pushing air in and out to open and close the spiderās legs like an arcade claw machine.
You can watch a video of their work in action below:
āIt happens to be the case that the spider, after itās deceased, is the perfect architecture for small scale, naturally derived grippers,ā Daniel Preston of Riceās George R. Brown School of Engineering said in a press statement. The spiders can lift more than 130 percent of their body weight and run through 1,000 open-close cycles before the joints degrade.
The team from Rice University, led by graduate student Faye Yap, has published a paper describing their work in the journal Advanced Science. In it, they note that humanity has a long history of repurposing the remains of dead organisms for new uses ā from the hides of animals worn as clothes to bones sharpened into arrowheads and tools. In this context, turning a dead spider into a robot gripper is not as unusual as it might first appear.
The scientists also note that roboticists frequently draw inspiration for their designs from the natural world, copying the adhesive surface of geckosā feet or the undulations of a fishās tail, for example. But, they reasoned, why copy when you can steal? Especially when Mother Nature has already done the hard work of developing effective mechanisms through millions of years of evolution.
As they write in the paper, āThe concept of necrobotics proposed in this work takes advantage of unique designs created by nature that can be complicated or even impossible to replicate artificially.ā
Image: Preston Innovation Laboratory/Rice University
The team had to euthanize their spiders before they could turn them into robot grippers.
The group ordered their test subjects from a biological supply company, reports Gizmodo, which created some problems for arachnophobic colleagues. As Riceās Preston told the publication, āOne of the employees that works in our front office really doesnāt like spiders. So we had to give a call to the front office whenever we had another delivery coming in for us to use for the project and just kind of give them a heads up.ā
The work is essentially a proof of concept for now, but Preston said it could have many future applications. āThere are a lot of pick-and-place tasks we could look into, repetitive tasks like sorting or moving objects around at these small scales, and maybe even things like assembly of microelectronics,ā he said in a press statement.
Another use might be collecting animal samples in nature, said Yap, as a spider grabber is āinherently camouflaged.ā