In situ integrated microrobots driven by artificial muscles built from biomolecular motors.

Journal: Science robotics
Published Date:

Abstract

Microrobots have been developed for applications in the submillimeter domain such as the manipulation of micro-objects and microsurgery. Rapid progress has been achieved in developing miniaturized components for microrobotic systems, resulting in a variety of functional microactuators and soft components for creating untethered microrobots. Nevertheless, the integration of microcomponents, especially the assembly of actuators and mechanical components, is still time-consuming and has inherent restrictions, thus limiting efficient fabrications of microrobots and their potential applications. Here, we propose a method for fabricating microrobots in situ inspired by the construction of microsystems in living organisms. In a microfluidic chip, hydrogel mechanical components and artificial muscle actuators are successively photopatterned from hydrogel prepolymer and biomolecular motors, respectively, and integrated in situ into functional microrobots. The proposed method allows the fast fabrication of microrobots through simple operations and affordable materials while providing versatile functions through the precise spatiotemporal control of in situ integration and reconfiguration of artificial muscles. To validate the method, we fabricated microrobots to elicit different motions and on-chip robots with unique characteristics for microfluidic applications. This study may establish a new paradigm for microrobot integration and lead to the production of unique biohybrid microrobots with various advantages.

Authors

  • Yingzhe Wang
    Department of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.
  • Takahiro Nitta
  • Yuichi Hiratsuka
    School of Materials Science, Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (JAIST), Ishikawa, Japan. yhira@jaist.ac.jp.
  • Keisuke Morishima
    Department of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.