Bidirectional Microrocker Bots Controlled via Neutral Position Offset
Tony Wang, DeaGyu Kim, Yifan Shi, Zhijian Hao, Azadeh, Ansari

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel microrobot control mechanism using neutral position biasing, enabling precise bidirectional movement on biological surfaces with simple magnetic actuation.
Contribution
The work presents a new control method for microrobots that allows bidirectional steering via neutral position offset, demonstrated on 3D-printed nickel-coated microrockers.
Findings
Robots achieve up to 100um/s speed in both directions.
Effective movement on biological surfaces demonstrated.
Control mechanism enables precise bidirectional navigation.
Abstract
The recent advancements in nanoscale 3D printing and microfabrication techniques have reinvigorated research on microrobots. However, precise motion control of the microrobots on biological environments using compact actuation setups remains challenging to date. This work presents a novel control mechanism and contact design that enables bidirectional steering via biasing the neutral position of the microrobot. Equipped with rockers to contact the substrate, the microrobot, hence microrocker bot, is capable of well-controlled forward and backward movement on flat and non-flat biological surfaces. The 100um by 113um by 36um robots were 3D printed via two-photon lithography and subsequently deposited with nickel thin films. Under a relatively small static magnetic field, the microrocker bot tilts either forward or backward to align the thin film magnetization direction with the magnetic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Advanced Materials and Mechanics · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
