Progress Towards Submersible Microrobots: A Novel 13-mg Low-Power SMA-Based Actuator for Underwater Propulsion
Cody R. Longwell, Conor K. Trygstad, Francisco M. F. R. Goncalves, Ke, Xu, and Nestor O. Perez-Arancibia

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel low-power, 13-mg SMA-based microactuator designed for underwater propulsion, demonstrating improved efficiency and potential for autonomous microswimmers compared to existing solutions.
Contribution
Introduction of a new low-power SMA microactuator with passive heat transfer control, enabling efficient underwater operation and autonomous microswimmer development.
Findings
Consumes about 150 mW at 1 Hz in water and air
Passively controls heat transfer with a soft encapsulating structure
Preliminary experiments show potential for autonomous underwater microswimmers
Abstract
We introduce a new low-power 13-mg microactuator driven by shape-memory alloy (SMA) wires for underwater operation. The development of this device was motivated by the recent creation of microswimmers such as the FRISHBot, WaterStrider, VLEIBot, VLEIBot+, and VLEIBot++. The first four of these robots, ranging from 30 to 90 mg, function tethered to an electrical power supply while the last platform is an 810-mg fully autonomous system. These five robots are driven by dry SMA-based microactuators first developed for microrobotic crawlers such as the SMALLBug and SMARTI. As shown in this abstract, dry SMA-based actuators do not operate efficiently under water due to high heat-transfer rates in this medium; for example, the actuators that drive the VLEIBot++ require about 40 mW of average power at 1 Hz in dry air while requiring about 900 mW of average power at 1 Hz in water. In contrast,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Underwater Vehicles and Communication Systems · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
