4.7 Article

3D Printed Biomimetic Soft Robot with Multimodal Locomotion and Multifunctionality

Journal

SOFT ROBOTICS
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages 1-13

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/soro.2020.0004

Keywords

multimaterial multiscale 3D printing; drug delivery; magnetic actuation; DLP projection stereolithography

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This study presents a 3D-printed soft robot with varied material compositions and hierarchical surface structures. The robot exhibits superior locomotion capabilities and versatile functionalities, making it suitable for tasks in harsh environments.
Soft robots can outperform traditional rigid robots in terms of structural compliance, enhanced safety, and efficient locomotion. However, it is still a grand challenge to design and efficiently manufacture soft robots with multimodal locomotion capability together with multifunctionality for navigating in dynamic environments and meanwhile performing diverse tasks in real-life applications. This study presents a 3D-printed soft robot, which has spatially varied material compositions (0-50% particle-polymer weight ratio), multiscale hierarchical surface structures (10 nm, 1 mu m, and 70 mu m features on 5 mm wide robot footpads), and consists of functional components for multifunctionality. A novel additive manufacturing process, magnetic-field-assisted projection stereolithography (M-SL), is innovated to fabricate the proposed robot with prescribed material heterogeneity and structural hierarchy, and hence locally engineered flexibility and preprogrammed functionality. The robot incorporates untethered magnetic actuation with superior multimodal locomotion capabilities for completing tasks in harsh environments, including effective load carrying (up to similar to 30 times of its own weight) and obstacle removing (up to 6.5 times of its own weight) in congested spaces (e.g., 5 mm diameter glass tube, gastric folds of a pig stomach) by gripping or pushing objects (e.g., 0.3-8 times of its own weight with a velocity up to 31 mm/s). Furthermore, the robot footpads are covered by multiscale hierarchical spike structures with features spanning from nanometers (e.g., 10 nm) to millimeters. Such high structural hierarchy enables multiple superior functions, including changing a naturally hydrophilic surface to hydrophobic, hairy adhesion, and excellent cell attaching and growth properties. It is found that the hairy adhesion and the engineered hydrophobicity of the robot footpad enable robust navigation in wet and slippery environments. The multimaterial multiscale robot design and the direct digital manufacturing method enable complex and versatile robot behaviors in sophisticated environments, facilitating a wide spectrum of real-life applications.

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