Ultrasound-activated ciliary bands for microrobotic systems inspired by starfish

Open access
Date
2021-11-09Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
Cilia are short, hair-like appendages ubiquitous in various biological systems, which have evolved to manipulate and gather food in liquids at regimes where viscosity dominates inertia. Inspired by these natural systems, synthetic cilia have been developed and utilized in microfluidics and microrobotics to achieve functionalities such as propulsion, liquid pumping and mixing, and particle manipulation. Here, we demonstrate ultrasound-activated synthetic ciliary bands that mimic the natural arrangements of ciliary bands on the surface of starfish larva. Our system leverages nonlinear acoustics at microscales to drive bulk fluid motion via acoustically actuated small-amplitude oscillations of synthetic cilia. By arranging the planar ciliary bands angled towards (+) or away (−) from each other, we achieve bulk fluid motion akin to a flow source or sink. We further combine these flow characteristics with a physical principle to circumvent the scallop theorem and realize acoustic-based propulsion at microscales. Finally, inspired by the feeding mechanism of a starfish larva, we demonstrate an analogous microparticle trap by arranging + and − ciliary bands adjacent to each other. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000515073Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Nature CommunicationsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
NatureOrganisational unit
09700 - Ahmed, Daniel / Ahmed, Daniel
Funding
ETH-08 20-1 - Bioinspired Acoustic Source and Sink for Microrobotic and Labon-on-a-Chip-Design (ETHZ)
853309 - Acousto-Magnetic Micro/Nanorobots for Biomedical Applications (EC)
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