Abstract

The demonstrations of micro-robotic systems in minimally invasive medicine include an individual or a swarm of microswimmer of various origin, artificial or biohybrid, often with an external computer-controlled electromagnetic field. There are several in vivo and in vitro control performances with artificial microswimmers but control of a biohybrid microswimmer using an open kinematic chain remains untouched. In this work, non-contact maneuvering control of a single magnetotactic bacterium cell is simulated. The results show that the proposed system is capable of adjusting the heading of the microswimmer moving at proximity to a flat boundary under the guidance of the set-point tracking scheme. The performance of the coupled model and the sensitivity to control parameters are demonstrated with the help of a time-dependent error to the yaw-angle reference under the influence of PID with adaptive integral gain.

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