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Millimeter-scale flexible robots with programmable three-dimensional magnetization and motions. | LitMetric

Millimeter-scale flexible robots with programmable three-dimensional magnetization and motions.

Sci Robot

Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Microrobotics Laboratory, University of Toronto, 5 King's College Rd., Toronto, Ontario M5S 3G8, Canada.

Published: April 2019


Article Synopsis

  • Flexible magnetic robots can quickly change shape to perform tasks like drug delivery and object handling, overcoming limitations of current microrobots.
  • A new UV lithography method allows for precise control of magnetic particles in flexible materials, enabling the creation of various microrobot designs with complex 3D orientations.
  • This technique supports innovative movements and functionalities, such as advanced bending and crawling, and includes a model to predict how these microrobots will deform and move when activated by magnets.

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Article Abstract

Flexible magnetic small-scale robots use patterned magnetization to achieve fast transformation into complex three-dimensional (3D) shapes and thereby achieve locomotion capabilities and functions. These capabilities address current challenges for microrobots in drug delivery, object manipulation, and minimally invasive procedures. However, possible microrobot designs are limited by the existing methods for patterning magnetic particles in flexible materials. Here, we report a method for patterning hard magnetic microparticles in an elastomer matrix. This method, based on ultraviolet (UV) lithography, uses controlled reorientation of magnetic particles and selective exposure to UV light to encode magnetic particles in planar materials with arbitrary 3D orientation with a geometrical feature size as small as 100 micrometers. Multiple planar microrobots with various sizes, different geometries, and arbitrary magnetization profiles can be fabricated from a single precursor in one process. Moreover, a 3D magnetization profile allows higher-order and multi-axis bending, large-angle bending, and combined bending and torsion in one sheet of polymer, creating previously unachievable shape changes and microrobotic locomotion mechanisms such as multi-arm power grasping and multi-legged paddle crawling. A physics-based model is also presented as a design tool to predict the shape changes under magnetic actuation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/scirobotics.aav4494DOI Listing

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