@article{33450, keywords = {Electricity, Oxide, Oxides, Microanalysis, Light, Chemistry, Microfabrication, Phase transitions, Heat, Vanadium, Transducers, Article, Structural phase transition, Phase transition, Equipment design, Actuation mechanism, Aqueous condition, Artificial muscle, Bimorph, High amplitudes, High durability, Integrated designs, Length scale, Manufacturability, Mechanical motions, Micro-scales, Microfabrication process, Nanolayers, Potential applications, Three dimensional geometry, Vanadium dioxide, Work output, Working environment, Actuators, Drug delivery, Electromechanical devices, MEMS, Microactuators, Vanadium derivative, Equipment, Microelectromechanical system, Microtechnology, Transducer, Hot Temperature, Micro-Electrical-Mechanical Systems, Vanadium compounds}, author = {K Liu and C Cheng and Z Cheng and K Wang and Ramamoorthy Ramesh and J Wu}, title = {Giant-amplitude, high-work density microactuators with phase transition activated nanolayer bimorphs}, abstract = {Various mechanisms are currently exploited to transduce a wide range of stimulating sources into mechanical motion. At the microscale, simultaneously high amplitude, high work output, and high speed in actuation are hindered by limitations of these actuation mechanisms. Here we demonstrate a set of microactuators fabricated by a simple microfabrication process, showing simultaneously high performance by these metrics, operated on the structural phase transition in vanadium dioxide responding to diverse stimuli of heat, electric current, and light. In both ambient and aqueous conditions, the actuators bend with exceedingly high displacement-to-length ratios up to 1 in the sub-100 μm length scale, work densities over 0.63 J/cm3, and at frequencies up to 6 kHz. The functionalities of actuation can be further enriched with integrated designs of planar as well as three-dimensional geometries. Combining the superior performance, high durability, diversity in responsive stimuli, versatile working environments, and microscale manufacturability, these actuators offer potential applications in microelectromechanical systems, microfluidics, robotics, drug delivery, and artificial muscles. © 2012 American Chemical Society.}, year = {2012}, journal = {Nano Letters}, volume = {12}, number = {12}, pages = {6302-6308}, issn = {15306984}, doi = {10.1021/nl303405g}, note = {cited By 90}, language = {eng}, }