Focused ultrasound enables selective actuation and Newton-level force output of untethered soft robots

Bo Hao(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Xin Wang(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Yue Dong(Harbin Institute of Technology), Mengmeng Sun(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Xin Chen(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Haojin Yang(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Yanfei Cao(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Jiaqi Zhu(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Xurui Liu(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Chong Zhang(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Lin Su(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Bing Li(Harbin Institute of Technology), Li Zhang(Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Nature Communications
June 18, 2024
Cited by 44Open Access
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Abstract

Untethered miniature soft robots have significant application potentials in biomedical and industrial fields due to their space accessibility and safe human interaction. However, the lack of selective and forceful actuation is still challenging in revolutionizing and unleashing their versatility. Here, we propose a focused ultrasound-controlled phase transition strategy for achieving millimeter-level spatially selective actuation and Newton-level force of soft robots, which harnesses ultrasound-induced heating to trigger the phase transition inside the robot, enabling powerful actuation through inflation. The millimeter-level spatial resolution empowers single robot to perform multiple tasks according to specific requirements. As a concept-of-demonstration, we designed soft robot for liquid cargo delivery and biopsy robot for tissue acquisition and patching. Additionally, an autonomous control system is integrated with ultrasound imaging to enable automatic acoustic field alignment and control. The proposed method advances the spatiotemporal response capability of untethered miniature soft robots, holding promise for broadening their versatility and adaptability.


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