Researchers from Penn State University and the slot US Air Force built on research stretching back to 1938 to harness the processing of mechanical information, and integrate it into an advanced form of material.
The technology is based on integrated circuits, which typically rely on silicon semiconductors in order to process information in a way that is similar to the role played by the brain in the human body.
The research team discovered that integrated circuits capable of performing computational tasks could be achieved using “nearly any material” around us.
“We have created the first example of an engineering material that can simultaneously sense, think and act upon mechanical stress, without requiring additional circuits to process such signals,” said Ryan Harne, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Penn State.