Swimming Performance Enhancement of the Magnetic Helical Microrobots Based on Surface Microstructure Modification

Yaozhen Hou, Kailun Bai, Shihao Zhong, Zhiqiang Zheng, Qing Shi, Qiang Huang, Toshio Fukuda, Fangxing Li*, Huaping Wang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Magnetic helical microrobots have attracted considerable attraction in microscale targeted delivery due to their high propulsion efficiency and movement flexibility. However, for biomedical applications in unstructured and multi-branched liquid environments, the capabilities of high swimming performance and precise selective control over a robot group of are essential. Here, we introduce a method for achieving high-performance propulsion and selective control of individual magnetic microrobots within a group by modulating surface wettability through localized surface microstructure modifications. We treated the surface of the helical microrobots with dimples and pimples of varying diameters and spacings to effectively distinguish the wettability. Our findings demonstrate that helical microrobots after surface modification exhibit higher step-out frequencies (ωstep-out) and maximum velocities (vr-max), where the modified microrobots become more hydrophobic compared to the microrobots before modification. The variation of microrobots' step-out frequencies (ωstep-out) and the maximum velocities (vr-max) correlate positively with the surface hydrophobicity. The swimming performance on the surface-modified microrobots is performed which demonstrates a maximum increase of 67% in forward velocity and 76% in step-out frequency. Furthermore, our method was effectively employed to actuate a helical microrobots group to achieve selective navigation in a multi-branched microchannel. We anticipate that this approach can be applied to achieve high-efficiency and precise targeted delivery in biomedical applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5729-5736
Number of pages8
JournalIEEE Robotics and Automation Letters
Volume10
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • additive manufacturing
  • automation at micro-nano scales
  • magnetic actuation
  • Micro/nano robots

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