Although it has been said several times that the future of nanoscale technology with nanobots is immense, each day researchers continue to expand it. Recently, in a first of its kind, a Cornell University-led collaboration has manufactured the first microscopic robot that can walk. The details seem like a plot from a science fiction story.
The collaboration is led by Itai Cohen, professor of physics, Paul McEuen, the John A. Newman Professor of Physical Science – both in the College of Arts and Sciences – and their former postdoctoral researcher Marc Miskin, who is now an assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania. The engineers are not new to producing nanoscale creations. To their name they already have a microscopic nanoscale sensor along with graphene-based origami machines.
The microscopic robots are made with semiconductor components that allow them to be controlled and made to walk with electronic signals. The robots have a brain and torso, and legs. They are 5 microns thick, 40 microns wide, and 40-70 microns in length. A micron is 1 millionth of a metre. The torso and the brain were the easy part. They are made of simple circuits manufactured from silicone photovoltaics. But the legs were completely innovative and they consist of four electrochemical actuators.
According to McEuen, the technology for the brains and the torso already existed, so they had no problem with it except for the legs. “But the legs did not exist before,” McEuen said. “There were no small, electrically activatable actuators that you could use. So we had to invent those and then combine them with the electronics.”
The legs were made of strips of platinum. They were deposited by atomic layer deposition and lithography, with the strips being just some dozen atoms thick. Then these strips of platinum are capped by layers of titanium. So, how did they make these legs to walk? By applying a positive charge to the platinum. When this is done, negative ions from the solution surrounding the surface of the platinum are adsorbed to the surface and they neutralize the charge. Neutralization makes the platinum to expand and the strips bend. Because the strips are ultrathin, they can bend on neutralization without breaking. To enable three dimensional motion control, rigid polymer panels were patterned on top of the strips. The panels were made to have gaps and these gaps made the legs to function like knees or ankles, enabling the legs to move in a controlled manner with generated motion.
A paper describing this technology titled: “Electronically integrated, mass-manufactured, microscopic robots,” has been published in the August 26 edition of Nature.
The future applications of this technology is immense. Since the size of the electronically controlled microscopic robots is that of a paramecium, one day when they are more sophisticated, they could be inserted into the human body to carry out some functions like cleaning up clogged veins and arteries, or even analyzing the human brain. Also this first production will become a template for the production of even more complex versions in the future. This initial mcroscopic robot is just a simple machine but imagine how sophisticated and computational complex it will be when it is installed with complicated electronics and onboard computers. Furthermore, to produce the robots do not take much in terms of time and resources because they are silicone-based and the technology already exists. So we could see the possibility of mass-produced robots like this being used in technology and medicine to the benefit of the human race. In fact the benefits are immense when one calculates the economics involved.
“Controlling a tiny robot is maybe as close as you can come to shrinking yourself down. I think machines like these are going to take us into all kinds of amazing worlds that are too small to see,” said Miskin, the study’s lead author.
The frontiers of nanobot technology is expanding by the day. With these mass produced robots in the market, I see a solution in the offing for various medical and technological challenges. This is an innovative nanobot.
Material for this post was taken from the Cornell University Website.
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