Bidirectional Propulsion of Arc‐Shaped Microswimmers Driven by Precessing Magnetic Fields

The development of magnetically powered microswimmers that mimic the swimming mechanisms of microorganisms is important for lab‐on‐a‐chip devices, robotics, and next‐generation minimally invasive surgical interventions. Governed by their design, most previously described untethered swimmers can be m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sumit Mohanty, Qianru Jin, Guilherme Phillips Furtado, Arijit Ghosh, Gayatri Pahapale, Islam S. M. Khalil, David H. Gracias, Sarthak Misra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-09-01
Series:Advanced Intelligent Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/aisy.202000064
Description
Summary:The development of magnetically powered microswimmers that mimic the swimming mechanisms of microorganisms is important for lab‐on‐a‐chip devices, robotics, and next‐generation minimally invasive surgical interventions. Governed by their design, most previously described untethered swimmers can be maneuvered only by varying the direction of applied rotational magnetic fields. This constraint makes even state‐of‐the‐art swimmers incapable of reversing their direction of motion without a prior change in the direction of field rotation, which limits their autonomy and ability to adapt to their environments. Also, due to constant magnetization profiles, swarms of magnetic swimmers respond in the same manner, which limits multiagent control only to parallel formations. Herein, a new class of microswimmers are presented which are capable of reversing their direction of swimming without requiring a reversal in direction of field rotation. These swimmers exploit heterogeneity in their design and composition to exhibit reversible bidirectional motion determined by the field precession angle. Thus, the precession angle is used as an independent control input for bidirectional swimming. Design variability is explored in the systematic study of two swimmer designs with different constructions. Two different precession angles are observed for motion reversal, which is exploited to demonstrate independent control of the two swimmer designs.
ISSN:2640-4567