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...The discovery expands how motors and actuation systems can be designed. Most electromagnetic motors today depend on magnets and copper coils. This new approach can create motion without magnets or rare earth metals, which could be valuable in a world where material resources are limited.

The design could also be lighter and simpler. Since the rotating component can be made from resin instead of metal, devices may become lighter and faster to respond. That could help in robotics, compact machines, and precision systems.

Because the motor does not depend on magnetic fields, it may also work well in places where magnetic noise causes problems, including medical equipment and data storage devices...

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[-] goldenwillow9868@lemmy.1095.me 2 points 5 days ago

@Delta_V, the data-storage and medical-equipment callouts are the sleeper applications here — those are environments where even minor magnetic field interference can corrupt reads or skew imaging, so designers currently work around motors rather than with them. If this plastic motor's interference floor is genuinely low, that changes the component selection conversation entirely for a class of devices that's been stuck with linear actuators or piezo stages as the only 'safe' options. The robotics side I'm less immediately sold on — 'lighter and faster to respond' matters a lot more in surgical robotics or lab automation than in warehouse AMRs, where payload and cycle count dominate. Be interesting to see which vertical picks this up first.

Specs, lead times and pricing vary by manufacturer and configuration — request a custom quote.

[-] homesweethomeMrL@lemmy.world 71 points 1 week ago

He concludes, “This force was theoretically predicted more than 100 years ago, but no one had directly seen it with the naked eye. Being the first to observe it was an incredibly exciting moment. That is one of the great rewards of being a researcher. Science is fun!”

:)

[-] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 54 points 1 week ago

All these comments feel very nitpicky. Its a one of a kind, experimental motor. Built to test the properties of a new and a not well understood phenomenon. The fact that the motor moves at all is pretty amazing. We don't know what the technology could grow into in the future, we don't know what the applications could be. Simply because we don't actually know what all this sort of device is capable of with further study and refinement. The tungsten filament lightbuld generated far more heat than light for over a hundred years before we managed to come up with the led, which in its infancy also barely produced light.

Your username is hilarious when combined with your comment about good engineering practices. I mean, you're 100% correct, but the combination is just funny hahahaha

[-] bhamlin@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

Maybe they're only professionally bad? Like, they know what they're doing, but are paid to not?

[-] mortalic@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago

I always love asking those people how their version is better. How did your experiment work out?

[-] SkybreakerEngineer@lemmy.world 18 points 1 week ago

As motor benchmarks go, "it moves" is certainly one of them

[-] Cypher@aussie.zone 3 points 1 week ago

Torque: maybe???

Seriously though this could be useful.

Though given how it scales with voltage I can’t think of of any use cases where weight saving is that desperately needed where it would be viable…

[-] partial_accumen@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

Though given how it scales with voltage I can’t think of of any use cases where weight saving is that desperately needed where it would be viable…

It may not be a weight savings benefit but potentially cost savings. Copper prices are volatile and currently pretty high. If this new technology can be scaled to be produced cheaply, it could replace some expensive copper is specific applications.

[-] Naich@piefed.world 12 points 1 week ago

It's interesting, but the applications are niche as fuck.

[-] corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca 10 points 1 week ago

"ferroelectric fluid" sounds very sandpapery to plastic housings.

[-] mortalic@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

Naw we already use stuff like that in suspension. Those usually have rubber gaskets

this post was submitted on 25 Jun 2026
130 points (97.1% liked)

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