Efficient Energy Management for Intelligent Microrobotic Swarms: Design and Impact

Author:

Zhu Minshen12ORCID,McCaskill John S.123,Karnaushenko Daniil12,Bandari Vineeth Kumar12,Gemming Sibylle4,Kanoun Olfa5,Arnold Marlen Gabriele6,Schmidt Oliver G.1237

Affiliation:

1. Research Center for Materials Architectures and Integration of Nanomembranes (MAIN) Chemnitz University of Technology 09126 Chemnitz Germany

2. Material Systems for Nanoelectronics Chemnitz University of Technology 09126 Chemnitz Germany

3. European Centre for Living Technology (ECLT) Ca' Bottacin, Dorsoduro 3911 Venice 30123 Italy

4. Institute of Physics Technische Universität Chemnitz 09107 Chemnitz Germany

5. Measurement and Sensor Technology Chemnitz University of Technology 09126 Chemnitz Germany

6. Corporate Environmental Management and Sustainability Chemnitz University of Technology 09126 Chemnitz Germany

7. School of Science TU Dresden 01062 Dresden Germany

Abstract

AbstractEnergy serves as the foundational element for all active functions within microrobots. Harvesting devices, such as photovoltaic cells and coils, play a crucial role in converting diverse forms of energy into electricity, while energy storage devices enable uninterrupted operation and liberate microrobots from dependence on external sources. Despite the evident importance of energy, there exists a significant disconnect between the development of energy devices and their integration into microrobotic systems, hampering the deployment of microrobots across diverse fields from agriculture to microsurgery. Here, for transcending the “material for material's sake” focus on simple generic metrics for material optimization, such as energy density, advocating attention to the higher tier transformation of material metrics that determine device‐level performance and so make a meaningful contribution to microrobotic technology is argued. Appropriate metrics for microrobotic swarms challenge the stereotype that tiny energy supplies are impractical; instead, swarms simplify individual microrobotic functions, reducing single energy supply requirements and utilizing swarm energy distribution and management. In addition to essential evaluations of the environmental and social impacts of intelligent microrobotic swarms for their safe and beneficial implementation, research targeting these higher‐tier metrics is crucial to connecting energy material research and microrobot developments effectively.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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