Morpheus Lab  
 
search




Associate Professor Benjamin Shapiro (AE/ISR) and Associate Professor Elisabeth Smela (ME) are co-inventors of U.S. Patent 7,523,608, "Electrically Driven Microfluidic Pumping for Actuation." The patent was issued on April 28, 2009.

The invention is an actuation apparatus and method utilizing electrically driven fluidic pumping for generating large stresses and strains. The actuator cell includes a supply chamber containing fluid, and an expansion chamber that receives fluid from the supply chamber and can deform a predetermined area of the actuator cell. The actuator cell also includes a channel that provides a fluid flow passage between the supply and expansion chambers, and a compliant material substantially surrounding the supply chamber, the expansion chambers. This causes fluid flow from the supply to the expansion chamber.

May 5, 2009


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Clark School Honors Two Department Faculty Members

Wind Tunnel Designated a Vertical Flight Heritage Site

Congratulations to our 2025 Department and College Honors and Award Recipients

UMD Alum Named Next Director of Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab

Alum Recognized with 2025 AIAA Missile Systems Award

High School Innovator to Community Changemaker

Aerospace Engineering Senior Earns Winston Family Award for Outstanding Thesis

MATRIX-Affiliated Faculty Solving Tomorrow's Challenges Today

Students Take Top Spots at AIAA Region III Student Conference

Maryland Engineering: Top 10 Among Public Graduate Programs, 7 Years Running

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home aero umd NIA NASA