Taking an origami 'millirobot' for a spin

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Millirobot sucking up a ball. Credit: Ze, Q. et al. / Springer Nature
Millirobot sucking up a ball. Credit: Ze, Q. et al. / Springer Nature

US scientists have developed a 7.8mm diameter origami 'millirobot', which uses magnets and origami folding to roll, flip, spin, and even swim. The robot has a cross-sectional diameter of 7.8 mm and consists of Kresling origami (a triangulated hollow cylinder) patterns with attached magnetic plates. The robot uses the folding/unfolding capability of Kresling origami to move. The folding/unfolding nature of the millirobot also allows for a pumping action that can deliver liquid medicine, and its spinning motion provides a sucking mechanism for cargo transportation, the researchers say. Millirobots may eventually be used as minimally invasive devices for biomedical diagnosis and treatments, they add.

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From: Springer Nature

Taking millimetre-scale origami robots for a spin

A millimetre-scale origami robot, which uses magnets and origami folding for multidirectional spinning-based locomotion, is presented in a paper in Nature Communications. The robot is amphibious, capable of locomotion in various environments and can perform tasks including controlled liquid medicine delivery and targeted solid cargo transport.

Wireless millimetre-scale origami robots have the potential to perform various tasks and may have potential biomedical applications. However, existing origami robots require complex systems to achieve multi-functionality. In addition, these robots show limited locomotion modes and cannot achieve movement on both ground and in water.

Ruike Renee Zhao and colleagues developed a rotation-enabled wireless, amphibious millirobot that can roll, flip and spin. The robot has a cross-sectional diameter of 7.8 mm and consists of Kresling origami (a triangulated hollow cylinder) patterns with attached magnetic plates. The robot uses the folding/unfolding capability of Kresling origami to roll, flip and spin. In addition, the folding/unfolding nature of the millirobot allows for a pumping action that is able to deliver liquid medicine. The authors also highlight that the spinning motion provides a sucking mechanism for cargo transportation.

The authors conclude that the millirobots may eventually serve as minimally invasive devices for biomedical diagnosis and treatments.

Multimedia

Self-adaptive locomotion on different terrains
Self-adaptive locomotion on different terrains
Targeted delivery of liquid medicine in water
Sucking mechanism for capturing cargo
Amphibious locomotion with cargo transportation

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Journal/
conference:
Nature Communications
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Stanford University, USA
Funder: R.R.Z., Q.Z., S.W., J.D., and S.L. acknowledge support from NSF Career Award CMMI- 2145601 and NSF Award CMMI-2142789. G. Ikeda acknowledges support from the American Heart Association 20POST35120540.
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