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Super-Strong Synthetic Muscles Developed

Too Hot! wrote to mention a BBC article about extremely powerful synthetic muscles. From the article: "The most powerful type, 'shorted fuel cell muscles' convert chemical energy into heat, causing a special shape-memory metal alloy to contract. Turning down the heat allows the muscle to relax. Lab tests showed that these devices had a lifting strength more than 100 times that of normal skeletal muscle. Another kind of muscle being developed by the team converted chemical energy into electrical energy which caused a material made from carbon nanotube electrodes to bend."

4 of 191 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Geek progress by dynamo52 · · Score: 4, Informative
    Call me crazy but wouldnt it be easier just to apply electrical energy to begin with?

    It is referring to the chemical energy of the fuel cells. All electrical energy derived from batteries is converted chemical energy

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  2. Re:End of the blue pill by pimpimpim · · Score: 4, Informative

    The corpora cavernosa is not a muscle!

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  3. Re:wtf by Eivind · · Score: 5, Informative
    I'm hoping you're joking.

    First, the human body is indeed effective, but not anywhere *close* to what you claim. The thing is, when you calculate the calorie-need for a certain activity, you typically do so by looking at a table. Say swim a mile in half an hour requires about X calories.

    But those numbers are *already* calculated (or more likely measured) including the human inefficiencies.

    Ever noticed you get warm and start sweating if you do heavy work ? That's waste heat for you baby.

    If you pedal a bike, and generate 100W, you'll use significantly more than 25cal/s doing so (a calorie is about 4 Joule).

    Second, producing "450 horsepower pro second" is a completely nonsensical statement. Horsepower (or KW) are measures of *power*, A car migth have 100 horsepower, you can measure it over a second, an hour or a year, it'll still have 100 horsepower.

    It's a lot like saying you're 6 feet tall pro second, which makes no sense, unless perhaps you mean you *grow* at 6 feet pro second.

    The article is dumb. 100 times as strong as skeletal muscle is a statement with no meaning unless you specify what exactly you mean;

    • Is it 100 times as strong as a muscle of the same mass ?
    • Is it 100 times as strong as a muschle of the same volume ?
    • Do you mean it has 100 times the force ?
    • Or 100 times the movement ?
    • Or 100 times the power ? (i.e. force times movement)
  4. Re:What about our bones? by Fred_A · · Score: 4, Informative

    It definitely can't ; some people can already break their bones with their overdevelopped muscles.

    Artificial muscles would definitely require skeletal reinforcement. Although I don't know if anyone has ever worked on this.

    I'm not sure if those synthetic muscle can actually be implanted in a living organism either.

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