Âé¶¹´«Ã½

Flash of brilliance

By Ian Sample

4 August 2001

A STRANGE new material that contracts like a muscle when you shine light on
it could one day make brain surgery safer. The light-activated material could be
used in surgical tools, keeping electricity well away from sensitive brain
tissue.

Most artificial muscles use polymers that contract when a voltage is applied
across them. Others need to be immersed in solutions of ions to work
(Âé¶¹´«Ã½, 3 June 2000, p 14).
But Mark Warner at the University of
Cambridge and Heino Finkelmann at Fribourg University in Germany decided to try
to make a muscle react to light.

To a…

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