Skip to main content

Liquid metal tendons could give robots the ability to heal themselves

Self-healing Metal Tendon for Legged Robots

Since fans first clapped eyes on the T-1000, the shape-shifting antagonist from 1991’s Terminator 2: Judgment Day, many people have been eagerly anticipating the day in which liquid metal robots became a reality. And by “eagerly anticipating,” we mean “had the creeping sense that such a thing is a Skynet eventuality, so we might as well make the best of it.”

Jump forward to the closing days of 2019 and, while robots haven’t quite advanced to the level of the 2029 future sequences seen in T2, scientists are getting closer. In Japan, roboticists from the University of Tokyo’s JSK Lab have created a prototype robot leg with a metal tendon “fuse” that’s able to repair fractures. How does it do this? Simple: By autonomously melting itself and then reforming as a single piece. The work was presented at the recent 2019 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS).

University of Tokyo/JSK Lab

The self-healing module is comprised of two halves that are connected via magnets and springs. Each half of the module is filled with an alloy with a low melting point of just 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit). When the fuse breaks, the cartridges heat, melting the alloy and allowing the two halves to fuse together again. While the re-fused joints are not as strong as they were before any break took place, the researchers have observed that gently vibrating the joint during melting and reforming results in a joint that is up to 90% of its original strength. This could be further optimized in the future.

liquid-metal-tendons-healing
University of Tokyo/JSK Lab

It’s still very early in the development process. But the ultimate ambition is to develop ways that robots will be able to better heal themselves, rather than having to rely on external tools to do so. Since roboticists regularly borrow from nature for biomimetic solutions to problems, the idea of robots that can heal like biological creatures makes a lot of sense.

Just like breakthroughs in endeavors like artificial muscles and continued research toward creating superintelligence, it does take us one step closer to the world envisioned in Terminator. Where’s John “savior of all humanity” Connor when you need him?

Editors' Recommendations

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
How robotic exoskeletons can help paraplegic patients heal from injuries
Gordon Cheng, Professor for Cognitive Systems, wants to dig deeper in understanding how the brain works.

Gordon Cheng, Professor for Cognitive Systems, wants to dig deeper in understanding how the brain works. Astrid Eckert / TUM

When a team of neuroscientists fitted paraplegic patients with exoskeletons, they hoped the patients could use the robotic assistance to walk. They found something even more remarkable: Using the exoskeleton helped their healing, with patients regaining some control over their legs.

Read more
Robots could soon make up a quarter of U.K. army, top general suggests
robots could soon make up a quarter of uk army general says gladiator military robot

The British army could soon include a huge number of robots to help the country fight its battles.

While battalions are unlikely to feature a cavalry of autonomous gun-toting androids that look as if they've just broken free from a sci-fi movie set, an array of robots large and small could be incorporated into the army to help it with various operations on the battlefield.

Read more
Giving robots a layer of fat could help supercharge their battery life
BYU's Robot King Louie being built by NASA

Structural, rechargeable zinc battery

Robots could be on course to get fatter -- and it’s for their own good. In an effort to solve one of the biggest problems in current robotics, a lack of battery life, researchers at the University of Michigan have developed a new rechargeable zinc battery that could be worn around robots like a layer of fat. This could provide them with up to 72 times more power capacity than they get from today’s commonly used lithium-ion batteries.

Read more