| Glass Octopus: Courtsey: Wikipedia |
Octopus is blue blooded because its oxygen carrier is copper based hemocyanin which turns bright blue upon binding with oxygen. Since hemocyanin is a sluggish oxygen carrier compared to hemoglobin, octopuses have 2 small cardiac pumps at the base of their gills for pumping deoxygenated blood through the gills and oxygenated blood to the systemic heart. The systemic heart situated at the centre of the body ensures blood rich in oxygen and nutrients reach all the tissues.
The tentacles are basically muscles and exhibit infinite degree of freedom through simple mechanics of contraction, elongation, bending, twisting and torsion. Since muscles are mostly water which can't be compressed, octopus arm is in essence a muscular hydrostat. Though each tentacle demonstrates dexterity and flexibility they never get entangled or stick to each other because the sensors in the suckers can distinguish between "self" and "other".
If only these features can be replicated in a bionic soft robotic arm!. The major challenge in this endeavor has been to mimic the simplicity and size. Conventional rigid jointed robotic arms move with a "jerk" within defined geometrical angles whereas octopus' arms move elegantly, fluidly as that of a ballerina. To design such a robotic arm soft materials with unique mechanical characteristics and miniature stimuli/sensors are not enough, complex algorithms to control shape, stiffness and motion are also needed.
For materials we do have a wide spectrum of elastomers to choose from. Ranging from very soft and pliable to moderately flexible and to very rigid and tough materials. Mixing and matching these elastomers in appropriate geometry can yield desired results. Depending upon the material chosen the stimuli could be magnetic fields ( eg. elastomers embedded with magnetic particles ), heat/temperature (for thermo-sensitive elastomers), light (for photo sensitive elastomers ), electricity (for electroactive polymers), and fluid pressure (for hollow, tube like geometry). For a given stimulus, the chosen materials would respond in varying degrees enabling bending, turning, twisting, stretching and clutching.
Recently a research team from Genoa, Italy succeeded in designing a soft robotic tentacle using special grade of silicone elastomer. The arm had a conical shape with 410 mm in length and 40 mm in diameter at the base. It sported ten suction cups of decreasing size from base to tip (from 20 mm to 12 mm). The suction cups were embedded with optoelectronic mechano-sensors minimizing the need for wiring. The arm performed with high reliability, and low power consumption.
TAIL PIECE
Octopuses are loners, pairing only to mate and die. The male dies soon after impregnating the female. The female lays the eggs, cares for them meticulously even forfeiting food. Once the eggs begin hatching, she too succumbs perhaps from starvation and exhaustion.
REFERENCES:
1. How Octopus Arms Bypass the Brain
1. Learning from Octopuses: Cutting-Edge Developments and Future Directions
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