Khaleej Times

Shape-shifting minibots printed with 3D ‘ink’

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paris — Engineers have created a soft, malleable 3D “ink” to print devices that can roll, jump, even grasp objects at the wave of a magnet, they said.

The shape-shifting material holds promise for flexible robotics and medicine, said the researcher­s, mooting tiny devices that can envelop a drug, transport it through the body, and unfold to release it where needed.

A team of US-based researcher­s made the new type of 3D printing ink by mixing magnetic iron particles with soft, silicone rubber.

“The menagerie of structures that can be magnetical­ly manipulate­d includes a smooth ring that wrinkles up, a long tube that squeezes shut, a sheet that folds itself, and a spider-like ‘grabber’ that can crawl, roll, jump, and snap together fast enough to catch a passing ball,” said the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT), whose experts spearheade­d the project. “It can even be directed to wrap itself around a small pill and carry it across a table.”

The exploit was reported in the scientific journal Nature.

According to Xuanhe Zhao of the MIT’s mechanical engineerin­g department, the material can be used to manufactur­e magnetical­ly-controlled biomedical devices.

“For example, we could put a structure around a blood vessel to control the pumping of blood,” he said in a statement issued by the institute. Or a magnet could be used to guide a tiny device through the gastrointe­stinal tract to take pictures, extract tissue samples, clear a blockage, or deliver drugs.

This is the latest breakthrou­gh in the quest for a soft, flexible material that can be manipulate­d to change shape and move.

Devices made from hydrogels, for example, swell or shrink when temperatur­e or pH changes, while hydraulic devices can be activated when water is pumped into them. So-called “elastomers” stretch when an electric current is applied. These devices are slow, however, with some requiring hours to change shape, said the research team. Some must be connected to water or air via tubes, while elastomers require high-voltage electric shocks.

“There is no ideal candidate for a soft robot that can perform in an enclosed space like a human body, where you’d want to carry out certain tasks untethered,” said Zhao’s colleague, Yoonho Kim. —

 ??  ?? A team of researcher­s made the new type of 3D printing ink by mixing magnetic iron particles with soft, silicone rubber.
A team of researcher­s made the new type of 3D printing ink by mixing magnetic iron particles with soft, silicone rubber.

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