Repairing Both Body and Brain of Soft Robots

Fri May 29 2026
Soft robots and wearable gadgets need parts that bend easily, work well, and stay strong when they get hit or stretched. Scientists have made polymers that can fix themselves after a break, but the sensors that let them sense touch or pressure often stay damaged. A new idea called “self‑healing and sense‑healing” tackles both problems at once. This approach uses tiny crystals called metal‑organic frameworks (MOFs) mixed into the plastic. MOFs have lots of holes and can be tuned to hold healing liquids or make bonds that re‑form. When the material cracks, the MOFs can release a liquid that glues the pieces together or create new bonds inside the plastic.
At the same time, MOFs can carry metal atoms or other conductive parts that make electricity flow. If a sensor in the robot gets cut, the MOFs help rebuild an electrical path by reconnecting broken pieces or forming new bridges that let charge move again. The result is a sensor that regains its ability to measure pressure, stretch or temperature after damage. Researchers have shown how these composites can be used in soft actuators that bend like muscles, skins that feel touch, and wearable strips that track heart rate or motion. The key is that the MOFs act as both a repair agent and an electrical helper, so one material does two jobs. Challenges remain: the materials must heal while still holding weight, keep working after many repairs, and be made in large quantities. Future work will focus on making smart systems that respond to light, heat or chemical signals so they can heal automatically in everyday life.
https://localnews.ai/article/repairing-both-body-and-brain-of-soft-robots-2e19e4c3

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