Submillimeter Multifunctional Ferromagnetic Fiber Robots for Navigation, Sensing, and Modulation

Author:

Zhang Yujing1,Wu Xiaobo23,Vadlamani Ram Anand4,Lim Youngmin5,Kim Jongwoon1,David Kailee4,Gilbert Earl46,Li You1,Wang Ruixuan1,Jiang Shan1,Wang Anbo1,Sontheimer Harald7,English Daniel Fine6,Emori Satoru5,Davalos Rafael V.4,Poelzing Steven23,Jia Xiaoting168ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA

2. Translational Biology, Medicine, and Health Graduate Program Virginia Tech Roanoke VA USA

3. Center for Heart and Reparative Medicine Research Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at Virginia Tech Carilion Roanoke VA USA

4. Department of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA

5. Department of Physics Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA

6. School of Neuroscience Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA

7. Department of Neuroscience University of Virginia Charlottesville VA USA

8. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA United States

Abstract

AbstractSmall‐scale robots capable of remote active steering and navigation offer great potential for biomedical applications. However, the current design and manufacturing procedure impede their miniaturization and integration of various diagnostic and therapeutic functionalities. Herein, submillimeter fiber robots that can integrate navigation, sensing, and modulation functions are presented. These fiber robots are fabricated through a scalable thermal drawing process at a speed of 4 meters per minute, which enables the integration of ferromagnetic, electrical, optical, and microfluidic composite with an overall diameter of as small as 250 µm and a length of as long as 150 m. The fiber tip deflection angle can reach up to 54o under a uniform magnetic field of 45 mT. These fiber robots can navigate through complex and constrained environments, such as artificial vessels and brain phantoms. Moreover, Langendorff mouse hearts model, glioblastoma micro platforms, and in vivo mouse models are utilized to demonstrate the capabilities of sensing electrophysiology signals and performing a localized treatment. Additionally, it is demonstrated that the fiber robots can serve as endoscopes with embedded waveguides. These fiber robots provide a versatile platform for targeted multimodal detection and treatment at hard‐to‐reach locations in a minimally invasive and remotely controllable manner.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials

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