Affiliation:
1. Physical Intelligence Department Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems 70569 Stuttgart Germany
2. Institute for Biomedical Engineering ETH Zurich Zurich 8092 Switzerland
3. Institute of Biomaterials and Biomolecular Systems University of Stuttgart 70569 Stuttgart Germany
4. Department of Mechanical and Process Engineering ETH Zurich Zurich 8092 Switzerland
5. School of Medicine Koç University Istanbul 34450 Turkey
6. College of Engineering Koç University Istanbul 34450 Turkey
Abstract
AbstractAcoustically‐driven bubbles at the micron scale can generate strong microstreaming flows in its surrounding fluidic medium. The tunable acoustic streaming strength of oscillating microbubbles and the diversity of the generated flow patterns enable the design of fast‐moving microrobots with multimodal locomotion suitable for biomedical applications. The acoustic microrobots holding two coupled microbubbles inside a rigid body are presented; trapped bubbles inside the L‐shaped structure with different orifices generate various streaming flows, thus allowing multiple degrees of freedom in locomotion. The streaming pattern and mean streaming speed depend on the intensity and frequency of the acoustic wave, which can trigger four dominant locomotion modes in the microrobot, denoted as translational and rotational, spinning, rotational, and translational modes. Next, the effect of various geometrical and actuation parameters on the control and navigation of the microrobot is investigated. Furthermore, the surface‐slipping multimodal locomotion, flow mixing, particle manipulation capabilities, the effective interaction of high flow rates with cells, and subsequent cancerous cell lysing abilities of the proposed microrobot are demonstrated. Overall, these results introduce a design toolbox for the next generation of acoustic microrobots with higher degrees of freedom with multimodal locomotion in biomedical applications.
Funder
Max Planck ETH Center for Learning Systems
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
3 articles.
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