海角大神

How do you get tiny robots to work together? A magnetic force field

Engineers hope that this will allow the tiny machines to one day be used in advanced manufacturing and research. 

This image shows how two microbots can be independently controlled when operating within a group, an advance aimed at using the tiny machines for applications such as advanced manufacturing and biomedical research.

David Cappelleri/Purdue University

January 14, 2016

Researchers at Purdue University have developed a method, which they call a 鈥渕ini force field,鈥 to use magnets to propel microbots, which will one day work in groups to manufacture tiny components, to each do different tasks.

Engineers are trying to replicate on a聽micro scale聽what large robots can do on a regular-sized automated assembly line: work on different tasks聽at the same time. Microbots can already work in groups to perform the same task, says David J. Cappelleri, an assistant professor in mechanical engineering at Purdue. The trick is to be able to give them independent assignments.聽

鈥淩ight now, they all have one signal and they all respond the same way,鈥 Prof. Cappelleri told 海角大神 in a phone interview. 鈥淲e can say, 鈥極k, this one goes forward, this one goes to the left' and we can have them do that at the same time,鈥 he says.

Charlie Kirk鈥檚 killing sparks calls to temper the violent tones of US politics

Cappelleri and his team describe their technique in the journal Micromachines. 聽聽

Their robots are 2 millimeters in diameter, about twice the size of a pinhead, thought they hope to get them down to 250 microns in diameter, the size of a dust mite. The tiny bots move by聽 with copper magnetic coils printed onto it, similar to printed circuit boards. 聽

Engineers use a computer to vary the strength of the electrical current in the coils, thereby moving the robots in different directions with attractive or repulsive forces.

"The robots are too small to put batteries on them, so they can't have onboard power," Cappelleri said in an online statement.

"You need to use an external way to power them. We use magnetic fields to generate forces on the robots. ," he explained.

The Monitor's View

Best response to Charlie Kirk鈥檚 killing

Cappelleri hopes that in about five years, the microbots will be able to build the tiny components that go into microsensors or other small mechanisms used in the automotive or aerospace industries. Another application is in the biomedical industry, where the microbots could work inside petri dishes, sorting, moving, and identifying cells.

鈥淎 lot of time it鈥檚 done by hand,鈥 Cappelleri told the Monitor. 鈥淚f you have robots that can do it for you, it can drive the cost down,鈥 he said.