Deccan Chronicle

New power source for robots

THE NEURONS upon exposure to light, fired to move the muscles, the study, published in the journal PNAS, noted. IT WAS very important to carefully design the scaffold the biobots grew around and interacted with to make the most out of the technology and

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Washington, Sept. 18: Researcher­s have developed a new generation of two-tailed robots that are driven by light-activated muscule tissue — an advance that brings engineers a step closer to building autonomous biobots.

Researcher­s led by Taher Saif of the University of Illinois in the US, designed a new generation of two-tailed bots powered by skeletal muscle tissue that was stimulated by onboard motor neurons.

The neurons upon exposure to light, fired to move the muscles, the study, published in the journal PNAS, noted.

“We applied an optogeneti­c neuron cell culture, derived from mouse stem cells, adjacent to the muscle tissue,” Saif said.

The neurons, he added, advanced towards the muscle and formed neuromuscu­lar junctions, and the swimmer assembled

on its own.

After ensuring that the neuromuscu­lar tissue worked well with their synthetic biobot skeletons, the team optimised the bot's functions.

“We used computatio­nal models, led by mechanical science and engineerin­g professor Mattia Gazzola, to determine which physical attributes would lead to the fastest and most efficient swimming,” Saif

said. He added that the researcher­s looked at variations in the number of tails and tail lengths for finding the most efficient design of the bot.

“Given the fact that biological actuators, or biobots, are not as mature as other technologi­es, they are unable to produce large forces. This makes their movement hard to control,” Gazzola, also from University of Illinois, said.

He added that it was very important to carefully design the scaffold the biobots grew around and interacted with to make the most out of the technology and achieve locomotive functions.

“The computer simulation­s we run play a critical role in this task as we can span a number of possible designs and select only the most promising ones for testing in real life,” Gazzola said.

Saif added that the ability to drive muscle activity with neurons is an advance that paves the way for further integratio­n of neural units within biohybrid systems.

“Given our understand­ing of neural control in animals, it may be possible to move forward with biohybrid neuromuscu­lar design by using a hierarchic­al organizati­on of neural networks,” Saif added.

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