Soft magnetic microrobots with remote sensing and communication capabilities
Quan Gao, Min‐Soo Kim, Denis von Arx, Elric Zhang, X. Zhang, Hao Ye, Christian Vogt, Claas Ehmke, Dianne Corsino, Federica Catania, Niko Münzenrieder, Michele Magno, Giuseppe Cantarella, Bradley J. Nelson, Salvador Pané
- Year
- 2025
- Citations
- 4
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Remote communication in small-scale robotics offers a powerful way to enhance their capabilities, introducing options for state monitoring, multi-agent collaboration, and autonomous operation. Integrating common remote communication tools, such as antennas, into microrobots is challenging with conventional design and manufacturing techniques. We propose a concept that integrates shape-reconfigurable soft microrobots with flexible electronics, leveraging their elastic mechanical properties to enable remote communication. This approach, based on photolithography processes, is scalable and adaptable to various sensing applications. As a proof of concept, we present a microrobot, which integrates a thermoresponsive magnetic hydrogel, an anisotropic support structure, and a flexible dipole antenna into a cohesive three-layered design. The microrobot can morph from a helical shape at low-temperatures to a planar shape at high-temperatures. This shape transformation can be remotely detected by external radio communication receivers, enabling shape-state recognition and environmental temperature sensing. Furthermore, we show that the collective behavior of multiple microrobots enhances the recognition performance by amplifying the signal. The concept represents a significant advancement in co-engineering smart materials and flexible electronics, illustrating an approach of microrobotic embodied intelligence by integrating environmental monitoring, magnetic navigation, and remote signaling.
Keywords
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