Title :
The role of piezoceramic microactuation for advanced mobility
Author :
Thakoor, Sarita ; Morookian, John Michael ; Cutt, James A.
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
Abstract :
This paper presents the potential role of piezoceramic microactuation in micro-robotics for future space missions, e.g. unmanned sample-return missions to Mars, in search of life or evidence of prebiotic materials. The focus of the paper is on the advanced mobility with the desired characteristics of high force, displacement, and operability over a wide temperature range, at the cost of lowest possible mass, volume, and power. A comparison of the various actuation technologies including piezoceramic, shape memory alloys, polymeric actuators and magnetostrictive materials is presented. The comparison suggests piezoceramics to be the most promising candidate. The concept of a flexible microactuator based on tailored films of lead lanthanum zirconate titanate, PLZT, deposited on flexible substrates is described. Such flexible microactuators are expected to offer a multifold enhancement in the force and displacement capabilities over those of the current state-of-the-art actuators based on bulk ceramic materials. Of special interest is the promise of high efficiency actuation from an optimized thin film based flexible bimorph structure by contact-less optical activation
Keywords :
flexible structures; lanthanum compounds; lead compounds; microactuators; mobile robots; piezoceramics; piezoelectric actuators; piezoelectric thin films; space research; Mars; PLZT; PLZT films; PbLaZrO3TiO3; advanced mobility; contactless optical activation; displacement capability; extraterrestrial life; flexible bimorph structure; flexible microactuator; flexible substrates; force capability; insect explorers; magnetostrictive materials; micro-robotics; piezoceramic microactuation; polymeric actuators; prebiotic materials; shape memory alloys; space missions; tailored films; unmanned sample-return missions; wide temperature range; Actuators; Costs; Magnetic materials; Mars; Microactuators; Optical films; Piezoelectric materials; Shape memory alloys; Space missions; Temperature distribution;
Conference_Titel :
Applications of Ferroelectrics, 1996. ISAF '96., Proceedings of the Tenth IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
East Brunswick, NJ
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3355-1
DOI :
10.1109/ISAF.1996.602736