China Daily

On a mission

Tiny robot can dislodge a foreign object inside human body

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts

Has your child swallowed a small battery? In the future, a tiny robot made from pig gut could capture it and expel it.

Researcher­s at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology are designing an ingestible robot that could be used to patch wounds, deliver medicine or dislodge a foreign object. They call their experiment an “origami robot” because the accordion-shaped gadget gets folded up and frozen into an ice capsule.

“You swallow the robot, and when it gets to your stomach the ice melts and the robot unfolds,” said Daniela Rus, a professor who directs MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligen­ce Laboratory. “Then, we can direct it to a very precise location.”

It’ s still along way before the device can be deployed in a human or animal. In the meantime, the researcher­s have created an artificial stomach made of silicone totes tit.

Rus said one of the robot’s most important missions could be to save the lives of children who swallow the disc-shaped button batteries that increasing­ly power electronic devices. If swallowed, the battery can quickly burn through the stomach lining and be fatal.

The robots could seek out and capture the battery before it causes too much damage, pushing it down through the gastrointe­stinal tract and out of the body.

The robot’s flexible frame is biodegrada­ble, made of the same dried pig intestine used for sausage casing. The researcher­s scoured markets in Boston’s Chinatown before finding the right material to build an agile robot body that could dissolve once its mission was accomplish­ed.

“They tried rice paper and sugar paper and hydrogel paper, all sorts of different materials,” Rus said. “We found that sausage casing has the best properties when it comes to folding and unfolding and controllab­ility.”

Embedded in its meaty body — it wouldn’t be hard to make a kosher version, Rus said — is a neodymium magnet that looks like a tiny metal cube.

Magnetic forces control its movement. Researcher­s use remote-control joysticks to change the magnetic field, allowing the robot to slip and crawl through the stomach on the way to the object it is trying to retrieve or the wound where it must deliver drugs.

Would it hurt to ingest a robot? Probably not, said research team member Steven Guitron, an MIT graduate student in mechanical engineerin­g.

“I’m sure if you swallowed an ice cube accidental­ly, it’s very similar,” he said.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A mechanical engineerin­g student at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology points a pipette at a tiny origami robot floating toward a wound in a stomach model.
ELISE AMENDOLA / ASSOCIATED PRESS A mechanical engineerin­g student at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology points a pipette at a tiny origami robot floating toward a wound in a stomach model.

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