Abstract

Untethered micron-scale mobile robots can navigate and non-invasively perform specific tasks inside unprecedented and hard-to-reach inner human body sites and inside enclosed organ-on-a-chip microfluidic devices with live cells. They are aimed to operate robustly and safely in complex physiological environments where they will have a transforming impact in bioengineering and healthcare. Research along this line has already demonstrated significant progress, increasing attention, and high promise over the past several years. The first-generation microrobots, which could deliver therapeutics and other cargo to targeted specific body sites, have just been started to be tested inside small animals toward clinical use. Here, we review frontline advances in design, fabrication, and testing of untethered mobile microrobots for bioengineering applications. We convey the most impactful and recent strategies in actuation, mobility, sensing, and other functional capabilities of mobile microrobots, and discuss their potential advantages and drawbacks to operate inside complex, enclosed and physiologically relevant environments. We lastly draw an outlook to provide directions in the veins of more sophisticated designs and applications, considering biodegradability, immunogenicity, mobility, sensing, and possible medical interventions in complex microenvironments.

Highlights

  • Intelligent material systems at the sub-millimeter scale are promising for applications in various fields, such as bioengineering, active matter, and microrobotics

  • Nanotechnology Research center affiliated to Bilkent University in

  • Mobile functional devices at the sub-millimeter length scales afford particular advantages to pursue novel bioengineering strategies. This size regime includes the average size of a mammalian cell, the basic building unit of a tissue or organ, thereby, permitting direct access to deep, complex, and delicate body sites, such as brain, spinal cord, heart, bile duct, pancreas, and liver.[7,8,9]

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Summary

Mobile microrobots for bioengineering applications

Untethered micron-scale mobile robots can navigate and non-invasively perform specific tasks inside unprecedented and hard-to-reach inner human body sites and inside enclosed organ-on-a-chip microfluidic devices with live cells. They are aimed to operate robustly and safely in complex physiological environments where they will have a transforming impact in bioengineering and healthcare. We review frontline advances in design, fabrication, and testing of untethered mobile microrobots for bioengineering applications. We convey the most impactful and recent strategies in actuation, mobility, sensing, and other functional capabilities of mobile microrobots, and discuss their potential advantages and drawbacks to operate inside complex, enclosed and physiologically relevant environments. We lastly draw an outlook to provide directions in the veins of more sophisticated designs and applications, considering biodegradability, immunogenicity, mobility, sensing, and possible medical interventions in complex microenvironments

Introduction
Planck Institute for Intelligent
Nanotechnology Research center affiliated to Bilkent University in
Critical review
Department at Johns Hopkins
Acoustic radiation force and acoustic streaming
Activation of cellular receptors
Major limitations
Biohybrid design
Full Text
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