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How Should Microrobots Swim?
被引:506
|作者:
Abbott, Jake J.
[1
,2
]
Peyer, Kathrin E.
[1
]
Lagomarsino, Marco Cosentino
[3
]
Zhang, Li
[1
]
Dong, Lixin
[1
,4
]
Kaliakatsos, Ioannis K.
[1
]
Nelson, Bradley J.
[1
]
机构:
[1] ETH, Inst Robot & Intelligent Syst, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland
[2] Univ Utah, Dept Mech Engn, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA
[3] Univ Milan, Dept Phys, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[4] Michigan State Univ, Dept Elect & Comp Engn, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA
来源:
关键词:
microrobot;
magnetic;
wireless;
untethered;
medical;
in vivo;
MAGNETIC STEREOTAXIS;
PROPULSION;
DYNAMICS;
MANIPULATION;
FABRICATION;
D O I:
10.1177/0278364909341658
中图分类号:
TP24 [机器人技术];
学科分类号:
080202 ;
1405 ;
摘要:
Microrobots have the potential to dramatically change many aspects of medicine by navigating through bodily fluids to perform targeted diagnosis and therapy. Researchers have proposed numerous micro-robotic swimming methods, with the vast majority utilizing magnetic fields to wirelessly power and control the microrobot. In this paper, we compare three promising methods of microrobot swimming (using magnetic fields to rotate helical propellers that mimic bacterial flagella, using magnetic fields to oscillate a magnetic head with a rigidly attached elastic tail, and pulling directly with magnetic field gradients) considering practical hardware limitations in the generation of magnetic fields. We find that helical propellers and elastic tails have very comparable performance, and they generally become more desirable than gradient pulling as size decreases and as distance from the magnetic-field-generation source increases. We provide a discussion of why helical propellers are likely the best overall choice for in vivo applications.
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页码:1434 / 1447
页数:14
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