News Release

A manta ray-inspired biosyncretic robot with stable controllability by dynamic electric stimulation

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Beijing Institute of Technology Press Co., Ltd

Schematic diagram of the proposed bio-syncretic swimmer

image: This bio-syncretic swimmer was composed of a skeleton structure, two fins, a living actuator, and a foam balance microsphere. view more 

Credit: Chuang Zhang, Shenyang Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Nature has provided great support for the development of robots. Inspired by manta rays, a team from the State Key Laboratory of Robotics at the Shenyang Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences, has developed a bionic swimming robot that is actuated by cultured skeletal muscle tissue and controlled by circular distributed multiple electrodes (CDME). The robot can be efficiently propelled by only one muscle tissue.

 

Biomimetics is one of the most important robotic research methods which can improve the kinematic performance of robots by imitating the structure and behavior of natural organisms. The bio-syncretic robot, which takes natural biological materials as the core element, is the further development of bionics. Some living cells have been used to realize some functions of robots, including sensing, control, actuation, etc., among which actuation as a key factor to determine its performance, is related to the overall performance of robots. However, innovative propulsion and control methods are needed to further develop the controllable motion performance of bio-syncretic robots. To solve this problem, researchers proposed a dynamic control method based on CDME. The research was published as a paper in the journal Cyborg and Bionic Systems.

 

The team found that the electric field generated by CDME was less harmful to the culture medium and cells than conventional electrodes. Using this method, the direction of the electric field generated by the electrode could be dynamically controlled, keeping it parallel to the driving tissue of the robot in real-time, thus ensuring stable control of the robot.

 

First, the team designed the robot skeleton based on the manta ray's structure and used polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) as the main material for the structure. At the same time, to facilitate the assembly of the driving tissue and the robot structure, the researchers chose the ring-shaped tissue made by myoblasts as the drive unit of the robot.

 

In addition, to obtain the circular muscle tissues with effective contractility, a rotational electric stimulation from the CDME has been used to realize uniform induction of the myoblasts to differentiate into myotubes. To control the robot to swim at a desired speed, the contractility of the muscle tissue was measured before assembly with the swimmer structure.

 

To control the bio-syncretic robot to swim at the desired speed, the research team used simulation methods to analyze the relationship between the robot's motion performance and the driving tissue contraction force.

 

Finally, to demonstrate the stable and controllable motion of the proposed bio-syncretic robot, the researchers realized the controllable swimming of the robot at different speeds using the proposed dynamic electrical stimulation method. In the experiment, the robot demonstrated effective swimming and stable controllability, which verified the effectiveness of the biomimetic design and CDME-based control method proposed by the research team.

 

The biomimetic design and actuation control method proposed in this study not only promote the further development of bio-syncretic robots but also have certain guiding significance for the biomimetic design of soft robots, muscle tissue engineering, and other related fields.

 

However, although the current bio-syncretic robots have achieved effective controlled motion, there are still many key bottlenecks that need to be overcome. For example, most of the robots are centimeters in size, which is difficult to apply to applications such as drug delivery in vivo. Therefore, some technologies including 3D printing and flexible manipulation oriented to micro-nano biological structures are the key to developing bio-syncretic micro-robots for clinical applications and other special environments. In addition, most of the existing bio-syncretic robots rely on external artificial stimuli to achieve controlled movement, which may lack autonomy. Therefore, the sensing and control method based on living cells may be applied to the research of bio-syncretic robots, to realize autonomous robot movement based on environmental information.

 

Authors of the paper include Chuang Zhang, Yiwei Zhang, Wenxue Wang, Ning Xi, Lianqing

 

This work was supported by the National Key R&D Program of China (2018YFB1304700), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (61925307, 62003338, and 61927805), the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (252311), the Nature Foundation of Liaoning Province of China (2021-

BS-021), the State Key Laboratory of Robotics (2020-Z16), and the Open Project of Hebei Key Laboratory of Micro-nano Precision Optical Sensing and Measurement Technology (NEUQ202102).

 

Reference

 

Authors: Chuang Zhang,1,2 Yiwei Zhang,1,2,3 Wenxue Wang,1,2 Ning Xi,1,2,4 Lianqing liu,1,2

 

 

Affiliations:

 

1 State Key Laboratory of Robotics, Shenyang Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences,

Shenyang 110016, China

 

2 Institutes for Robotics and Intelligent Manufacturing, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyang 110169, China

 

3 School of Automation and Electrical Engineering, Shenyang Ligong University, Shenyang 110159, China

 

4 Emerging Technologies Institute, Department of Industrial & Manufacturing Systems Engineering, University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, China

 

A brief introduction about yourself.

 

About Dr. Chuang Zhang:

 

Chuang Zhang received his B. Eng. degree in Mechanical Design, Manufacturing and Automation from Shenyang University of Technology, Shenyang, China, in 2012, and his Ph.D. in Pattern Recognition and Intelligent Systems from Shenyang Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyang, China, in 2019. He is currently an associate professor at Shenyang Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences. His current research interests include bio-syncretic robots, Biomimetic Robots, Soft Robots, Micro Robots.


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