4.6 Article

Water Skating Miniature Robot Propelled by Acoustic Bubbles

Journal

MICROMACHINES
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/mi14050999

Keywords

cavitational microstreaming; micropropulsion; environment monitoring

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This paper presents a miniature robot that can monitor surroundings and explore small and complex environments by skating on the surface of water. The robot is primarily made of extruded polystyrene insulation (XPS) and Teflon tubes and is propelled by microstreaming flows caused by gaseous bubbles trapped in the Teflon tubes. The robot's motion and velocity were tested and measured at different frequencies and voltages, with results showing that the propulsion velocity is proportional to the applied voltage but highly dependent on the applied frequency. The robot's maneuvering capability was demonstrated by selectively exciting bubbles with different resonant frequencies, allowing for linear propulsion, rotation, and 2D navigation on the water surface.
This paper presents a miniature robot designed for monitoring its surroundings and exploring small and complex environments by skating on the surface of water. The robot is mainly made of extruded polystyrene insulation (XPS) and Teflon tubes and is propelled by acoustic bubble-induced microstreaming flows generated by gaseous bubbles trapped in the Teflon tubes. The robot's linear motion, velocity, and rotational motion are tested and measured at different frequencies and voltages. The results show that the propulsion velocity is proportional to the applied voltage but highly depends on the applied frequency. The maximum velocity occurs between the resonant frequencies for two bubbles trapped in Teflon tubes of different lengths. The robot's maneuvering capability is demonstrated by selective bubble excitation based on the concept of different resonant frequencies for bubbles of different volumes. The proposed water skating robot can perform linear propulsion, rotation, and 2D navigation on the water surface, making it suitable for exploring small and complex water environments.

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