PDA

View Full Version : Robotic swimmers, self-propelling nanomotors, Max Planck Research Group Peer Fischer, Stuttgart, Germany



Airicist
22nd November 2014, 02:10
Developer - Max Planck Research Group Peer Fischer (https://pr.ai/showthread.php?9010)

Airicist
22nd November 2014, 02:14
https://vimeo.com/92177639

Nanopropellers
April 16, 2014


Scientific Work was conducted in the Lab for Micro Nano and Molecular Systems, Prof. Peer Fischer
Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, Stuttgart, Germany

Airicist
22nd November 2014, 02:18
https://vimeo.com/102944010

Fabrication of worlds smallest propeller
August 8, 2014


Tissue and biological fluids are complex viscoelastic media with a nanoporous macromolecular structure. Here, we demonstrate that helical nanopropellers can be controllably steered through such a biological gel. The screw-propellers have a filament diameter of about 70 nm and are smaller than previously reported nanopropellers as well as any swimming microorganism. We show that the nanoscrews will move through high-viscosity solutions with comparable velocities to that of larger micropropellers, even though they are so small that Brownian forces suppress their actuation in pure water. When actuated in viscoelastic hyaluronan gels, the nanopropellers appear to have a significant advantage, as they are of the same size range as the gel’s mesh size. Whereas larger helices will show very low or negligible propulsion in hyaluronan solutions, the nanoscrews actually display significantly enhanced propulsion velocities that exceed the highest measured speeds in Newtonian fluids. The nanopropellers are not only promising for applications in the extracellular environment but small enough to be taken up by cells. (ACS Nano (2014), DOI: 10.1021/nn502360t.)

Airicist
22nd November 2014, 02:19
https://vimeo.com/109797274

A Swimming Micro-Scallop
October 23, 2014


Biological microorganisms swim with flagella and cilia that execute non reciprocal motions for low Reynolds number (Re) propulsion in viscous fluids. This symmetry requirement is a consequence of Purcell’s scallop theorem, which complicates the actuation scheme needed by micro-swimmers. However, most biomedically important fluids are non-Newtonian where the scallop theorem no longer holds. It should therefore be possible to realize a micro-swimmer that moves with reciprocal periodic body-shape changes in non-Newtonian fluids. Here, we report a symmetric “micro-scallop”, a single-hinge micro-swimmer that can propel in shear thickening and shear thinning (non-Newtonian) fluids by reciprocal motion at low Re. Excellent agreement between our measurements and both numerical and analytical theoretical predictions indicates that the net propulsion is caused by modulation of the fluid viscosity upon varying the shear rate. This reciprocal swimming mechanism opens new possibilities in designing biomedical micro-devices that can propel by a simple actuation scheme in non-Newtonian biological fluids. (Nat. Commun. 5: 5119 (2014). doi: 10.1038/ncomms6119.)

Tian Qiu, Tung-Chun Lee, Andrew G. Mark, Konstantin I. Morozov, Raphael
Munster, Otto Mierka, Stefan Turek, Alexander M. Leshansky, and Peer
Fischer. Swimming by Reciprocal Motion at Low Reynolds Number. Nat. Commun.
5: 5119 doi: 10.1038/ncomms6119 (2014).

Airicist
22nd November 2014, 02:20
Article "Tiny scallop-like robotic swimmers could deliver drugs to treat diseases (https://phys.org/news/2014-11-tiny-scallop-like-robotic-swimmers-drugs.html)"

by Bob Yirka
November 6, 2014

Airicist
25th June 2015, 21:49
https://vimeo.com/131750857

Helical micro and nanopropellers for applications in biological fluidic enviroments
June 25, 2015


Video for Design challenge:
Video entry won the “Microrobotics Design Challenge” at the Hamlyn Symposium in London. (June, 2016).
Helical Micro and Nanopropellers for Applications in Biological Fluidic Enviroments
Debora Walker, Tian Qiu, Andrew G. Mark, Alejandro Posada, Peer Fischer

Airicist
1st October 2016, 19:56
"Shape-programmable miniscule robots (https://www.mpg.de/10754617/shape-programmable-miniscule-robots)"
Soft materials that can use magnetic fields to generate desired time-varying shapes could provide an engine for microswimmers

September 26, 2016

Airicist
25th January 2018, 18:45
https://youtu.be/hcfMZ6qjdXM

This robot can walk and swim — inside you

Published on Jan 24, 2018


A tiny robot with moves inspired by caterpillars and jellyfish is small enough to crawl, walk and swim inside the human body.

"This Tiny Robot Walks, Crawls, Jumps and Swims. But It Is Not Alive. (https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/24/science/tiny-robot-medical.html)"

by James Gorman
January 24, 2018

Airicist
16th March 2018, 09:30
https://youtu.be/LseYqgTgqw0

Why a robot might crawl through your body

Published on Mar 16, 2018


This four millimetre long robot was designed by the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems to move through the human body. It can walk, roll, swim, jump and even carry cargo and may be used in minimally invasive surgery or to deliver drugs to specific parts inside the body.

Airicist
8th November 2018, 22:50
https://youtu.be/4cRyaQ3g_fs

Nanorobots propel through the eye (https://is.mpg.de/news/nanorobots-propel-through-the-eye)

Published on Nov 8, 2018


An international team of scientists, some from the “Micro, Nano and Molecular Systems” Lab at the Max-Planck-Instritute for Intelligent Systems in Stuttgart, developed specially coated nano-robots that can be magnetically moved through dense tissue like the vitreous of the eye. This has never been achieved before! So far, the transport of these so called nano-vehicles has only been demonstrated in model systems or biological fluids, but not in real tissue. The work was published in the journal Science Advances and constitutes one step further towards nano-robots becoming minimally-invasive tools for precisely delivering medicine to where it is needed.