Cu3Sn joint based on transient liquid phase bonding of Cu@Cu6Sn5 core
Jul 23, 2023Kombucha electronics: electronic circuits on kombucha mats
Oct 15, 2023Whip Up Some Homemade Artisanal Flux
May 27, 2023Effect of remelting heat treatment on the microstructure and mechanical properties of SnBi solder under high
Jul 14, 2023Cored Wire Market Share, Size, Trends and Growth 2023 to 2028
Sep 09, 2023Phase Change Materials For Flexible And Strong Robots
Shape shifters have long been the stuff of speculative fiction, but researchers in China have developed a magnetoactive phase transitional matter (MPTM) that makes Odo slipping through an air vent that much more believable.
Soft robots can squeeze into small spaces or change shape as needed, but many of these systems aren't as strong as their more mechanically rigid siblings. Inspired by the sea cucumber's ability to manipulate its rigidity, this new MPTM can be inductively heated to a molten state to change shape as well as encapsulate or release materials. The neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) microparticles suspended in gallium will then return to solid form once cooled.
Applications in drug delivery, foreign object removal, and smart soldering (video after the break) probably have more real world impact than the LEGO minifig T1000 impersonation, despite how cool that looks. While a pick-and-place can do better soldering work on a factory line, there might be repair situations where a magnetically-controlled solder system could come in handy.
We’ve seen earlier work with liquid robots using gallium and bio-electronic hybrids also portending the squishy future of robotics.
Via ArsTechnica