Scale-reconfigurable miniature ferrofluidic robots for negotiating sharply variable spaces

Author:

Fan Xinjian1ORCID,Jiang Yihui1,Li Mingtong2ORCID,Zhang Yunfei1,Tian Chenyao3ORCID,Mao Liyang3,Xie Hui3ORCID,Sun Lining1ORCID,Yang Zhan1ORCID,Sitti Metin245ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering, Soochow University, No. 8, Jixue Road, Suzhou 215131, China.

2. Physical Intelligence Department, Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, Heisenbergstr. 3, Stuttgart 70569, Germany.

3. State Key Laboratory of Robotics and Systems, Harbin Institute of Technology, Yikuang, Harbin 150080, China.

4. Institute for Biomedical Engineering, ETH Zürich, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland.

5. School of Medicine and College of Engineering, Koç University, 34450 Istanbul, Turkey.

Abstract

Magnetic miniature soft robots have shown great potential for facilitating biomedical applications by minimizing invasiveness and possible physical damage. However, researchers have mainly focused on fixed-size robots, with their active locomotion accessible only when the cross-sectional dimension of these confined spaces is comparable to that of the robot. Here, we realize the scale-reconfigurable miniature ferrofluidic robots (SMFRs) based on ferrofluid droplets and propose a series of control strategies for reconfiguring SMFR’s scale and deformation to achieve trans-scale motion control by designing a multiscale magnetic miniature robot actuation (M3RA) system. The results showed that SMFRs, varying from centimeters to a few micrometers, leveraged diverse capabilities, such as locomotion in structured environments, deformation to squeeze through gaps, and even reversible scale reconfiguration for navigating sharply variable spaces. A miniature robot system with these capabilities combined is promising to be applied in future wireless medical robots inside confined regions of the human body.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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