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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

Rice Researchers Develop Soft Robotic Arm Powered by Light and AI for Precise Motion

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
June 9, 2025
in Chemistry
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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In a groundbreaking leap for the field of soft robotics, researchers at Rice University have unveiled a revolutionary robotic arm that operates entirely without onboard electronics or wiring. This soft robotic appendage, guided and powered remotely by precisely patterned laser light, ushers in a new era of robotic design that draws on advanced materials science, optics, and machine learning to carry out intricate movements hitherto unattainable by traditional robotic systems. The implications of this technology extend broadly—from pioneering implantable biomedical devices to transforming industrial automation where delicate handling is paramount.

At the heart of this innovation lies a specially engineered azobenzene liquid crystal elastomer (LCE), a polymeric material renowned for its unique capability to directly respond to light stimuli. Unlike conventional robotic materials that rely on rigid mechanical components like joints and motors, this LCE-based arm reacts to spatially controlled blue laser light by contracting and bending, mimicking natural biological movements. This photomechanical response is both rapid and reversible, enabled by the material’s fast relaxation time which allows it to revert to its original shape within seconds once the light stimulus is removed.

The Rice research team, led by assistant professor Hanyu Zhu and first-authored by doctoral alumna Elizabeth Blackert, integrated a sophisticated light-patterning system that transforms a single coherent laser beam into multiple independently controllable beamlets using a spatial light modulator. These beamlets can be dynamically modulated in intensity and activation, allowing specific regions of the soft robotic arm to contract or relax on demand. This distributed optical control system effectively grants the soft arm an almost infinite degree of freedom, far surpassing the discrete motions possible with rigid-link robots.

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Adding a layer of computational intelligence, the researchers employed a convolutional neural network — a form of artificial intelligence excelling in pattern recognition — to establish the relationship between laser light patterns and the resulting mechanical deformation of the arm. By training the model with empirical data from various light configurations, the AI was able to predict and generate the exact laser patterns needed to produce complex motions. This cloud of interplay between materials physics and deep learning optimization minimizes the need for human operators to manually control the arm, enabling automated, real-time actuation with precision.

A key technical advancement contributing to the system’s success is the development of the light-sensitive elastomer itself. Previous iterations of photoresponsive materials suffered from slow response times or necessitated exposure to high-energy ultraviolet light, raising concerns regarding safety, durability, and practicality. The new azobenzene LCE developed at Rice responds swiftly to safer, longer blue wavelengths of laser light and relaxes rapidly in the absence of illumination. This fast-cycle behavior is critical for feedback control systems, facilitating agile and adaptable robotic movement.

The inspiration for the robotic arm’s photomechanical behavior draws parallels to natural phenomena such as heliotropism, where plants orient themselves towards light sources. Analogous to a flower stem bending towards the sun, the elastomeric arm contracts in regions undergoing laser irradiation, thereby directing its flexion precisely where needed. This biomimetic approach reveals how soft robotics can harness fundamental principles of nature to achieve sophisticated actuation without complex hardware.

While the current prototype is planar and operates in two dimensions, the researchers envision extending the architecture into three-dimensional motion. By incorporating additional sensors and imaging systems, future iterations could move with lifelike fluidity in space, opening pathways for applications that demand gentle, multi-axis maneuvering. Such enhancements could revolutionize minimally invasive procedures by enabling implantable devices that navigate the human body autonomously or industrial robots capable of handling fragile goods with unmatched delicacy.

Soft robotics has long promised to overcome challenges inherent in traditional robotics, particularly when it comes to interacting safely with humans and pliable objects. Conventional robots generally rely on rigid structures and preprogrammed motions, limiting adaptability and risking damage to delicate tissues or materials. The optically controlled soft robotic arm harnesses the full continuum of motion offered by soft materials, achieving reconfigurable shapes and gestures on the fly, guided entirely by non-contact optical cues.

The interdisciplinary nature of this advance cannot be overstated. It combines cutting-edge developments in polymer chemistry, high-resolution optics, machine learning, and control engineering to create a system capable of real-time, spatially precise actuation without the encumbrance of heavy electronics. As assistant professor Zhu reflected, the project required a melding of expertise rarely found in a single group, but this convergence has paved the way to new robotic modalities anchored firmly in programmable matter.

The research, published in Advanced Intelligent Systems, was supported by the National Science Foundation, the Welch Foundation, and the JP Morgan Chase AI Research program. This collaboration underscores the growing recognition of soft robotics as a frontier field whose breakthroughs may soon reshape diverse sectors such as healthcare, manufacturing, and consumer technology. As the authors highlight, the study presents a proof-of-concept that could catalyze development of safer and more versatile robotics designed to meet the nuanced demands of modern society.

Looking ahead, the implications for soft robotic systems powered and controlled by light are profound. Without the limitations of wires or bulky power sources, such robots could achieve unprecedented degrees of miniaturization and deployment flexibility. Moreover, by leveraging advances in AI to optimize control in real-time, the technology delivers a scalable framework for creating custom robotic behaviors tailored dynamically through software-defined optical inputs. This synergy holds substantial promise for the next generation of adaptive, intelligent machines.

In essence, this work at Rice University represents a pivotal step toward realizing the long-envisioned dream of soft robots capable of interacting with complex environments and performing delicate tasks autonomously. By blending the physics of liquid crystal elastomers, the precision of laser optics, and the power of neural networks, the team has demonstrated how light itself can serve as the lifeblood of robotic actuation. As research continues to unravel the capabilities of optically responsive soft materials, the horizon gleams with possibilities for robotics that are at once gentle, smart, and wholly untethered.

Subject of Research: Not applicable

Article Title: Spatiotemporally Controlled Soft Robotics with Optically Responsive Liquid Crystal Elastomers

News Publication Date: June 9, 2025

Web References:

https://news.rice.edu/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/aisy.202500045

References:
Blackert et al., “Spatiotemporally Controlled Soft Robotics with Optically Responsive Liquid Crystal Elastomers,” Advanced Intelligent Systems, DOI: 10.1002/aisy.202500045

Image Credits: Photos by Jeff Fitlow/Rice University

Keywords

Soft robotics, Robotics, Machine learning, Soft matter, Liquid crystals, Optics, Laser light, Neural networks

Tags: advanced materials scienceazobenzene liquid crystal elastomerbiomedical device innovationdelicate handling roboticsindustrial automation technologylight-powered robotic armmachine learning in roboticsphotomechanical responseremote robotic motion controlRice University research breakthroughrobotics without electronicssoft robotics

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