TY - JOUR
T1 - Dynamic Control of Multimodal Motion for Bistable Soft Millirobots in Complex Environments
AU - Xin, Zhengyuan
AU - Zhong, Shihao
AU - Wu, Anping
AU - Zheng, Zhiqiang
AU - Shi, Qing
AU - Huang, Qiang
AU - Fukuda, Toshio
AU - Wang, Huaping
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 IEEE.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Soft millirobots are highly promising for biomedical applications due to their reconfigurability and multifunctionality within physiological environments. However, the diverse and narrow biological cavity environments pose significant adaptability challenges for these millirobots. Here, we present a dual-morphology, thin-film millirobot equipped with a magnetic drive head and a functional tail to facilitate multimodal motion and targeted cell delivery. The millirobot can reversibly switch between two distinct morphologies in response to environmental stimuli through the deformation of its hydrogel body. Utilizing these dual morphologies, the millirobot can perform robust multimodal fundamental motions controlled by magnetic fields. We encapsulate fundamental motions with specific programmable magnetic field parameters into motion primitives, allowing easy invocation and adjustment of motion modes on demand. A knowledge graph is established to map terrain features to motion units, enabling the identification of optimal motion modes based on typical terrain characteristics. Experimental results indicate that the millirobot can effectively switch its morphology and movement modes to navigate various terrains, including narrow and curved channels as small as 1 mm, 0.8 mm high stairs with a 15° incline, and even the complex environment of a swine intestinal lumen. Its functional tail can carry immune cells to target and kill cancer cells. This robot can transport drugs and cells while navigating complex terrains through multimodal motion, paving the way for targeted medical tasks in intricate human environments in the future.
AB - Soft millirobots are highly promising for biomedical applications due to their reconfigurability and multifunctionality within physiological environments. However, the diverse and narrow biological cavity environments pose significant adaptability challenges for these millirobots. Here, we present a dual-morphology, thin-film millirobot equipped with a magnetic drive head and a functional tail to facilitate multimodal motion and targeted cell delivery. The millirobot can reversibly switch between two distinct morphologies in response to environmental stimuli through the deformation of its hydrogel body. Utilizing these dual morphologies, the millirobot can perform robust multimodal fundamental motions controlled by magnetic fields. We encapsulate fundamental motions with specific programmable magnetic field parameters into motion primitives, allowing easy invocation and adjustment of motion modes on demand. A knowledge graph is established to map terrain features to motion units, enabling the identification of optimal motion modes based on typical terrain characteristics. Experimental results indicate that the millirobot can effectively switch its morphology and movement modes to navigate various terrains, including narrow and curved channels as small as 1 mm, 0.8 mm high stairs with a 15° incline, and even the complex environment of a swine intestinal lumen. Its functional tail can carry immune cells to target and kill cancer cells. This robot can transport drugs and cells while navigating complex terrains through multimodal motion, paving the way for targeted medical tasks in intricate human environments in the future.
KW - Cell delivery
KW - magnetic actuation
KW - multimodal motion control
KW - reversible dual-morphology
KW - soft millirobot
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105003556026&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TRO.2025.3551541
DO - 10.1109/TRO.2025.3551541
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105003556026
SN - 1552-3098
VL - 41
SP - 2662
EP - 2676
JO - IEEE Transactions on Robotics
JF - IEEE Transactions on Robotics
ER -