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      Fabrication, control, and modeling of robots inspired by flagella and cilia

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      Bioinspiration & Biomimetics
      IOP Publishing

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          Abstract

          Flagella and cilia are slender structures that serve important functionalities in the microscopic world through their locomotion induced by fluid and structure interaction. With recent developments in microscopy, fabrication, biology, and modeling capability, robots inspired by the locomotion of these organelles in low Reynolds number flow have been manufactured and tested on the micro-and macro-scale, ranging from medical in vivo microbots, microfluidics to macro prototypes. We present a collection of modeling theories, control principles, and fabrication methods for flagellated and ciliary robots.

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          Principal component analysis

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            Microscopic artificial swimmers.

            Microorganisms such as bacteria and many eukaryotic cells propel themselves with hair-like structures known as flagella, which can exhibit a variety of structures and movement patterns. For example, bacterial flagella are helically shaped and driven at their bases by a reversible rotary engine, which rotates the attached flagellum to give a motion similar to that of a corkscrew. In contrast, eukaryotic cells use flagella that resemble elastic rods and exhibit a beating motion: internally generated stresses give rise to a series of bends that propagate towards the tip. In contrast to this variety of swimming strategies encountered in nature, a controlled swimming motion of artificial micrometre-sized structures has not yet been realized. Here we show that a linear chain of colloidal magnetic particles linked by DNA and attached to a red blood cell can act as a flexible artificial flagellum. The filament aligns with an external uniform magnetic field and is readily actuated by oscillating a transverse field. We find that the actuation induces a beating pattern that propels the structure, and that the external fields can be adjusted to control the velocity and the direction of motion.
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              ENGINEERING FLOWS IN SMALL DEVICES

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Bioinspiration & Biomimetics
                Bioinspir. Biomim.
                IOP Publishing
                1748-3182
                1748-3190
                December 19 2022
                January 01 2023
                December 19 2022
                January 01 2023
                : 18
                : 1
                : 011003
                Article
                10.1088/1748-3190/aca63d
                eccd2513-3371-4262-934d-d50aa7408a58
                © 2023

                https://iopscience.iop.org/page/copyright

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