skip to main content


Title: Magnetic bio-hybrid micro actuators
Over the past two decades, there has been a growing body of work on wireless devices that can operate on the length scales of biological cells and even smaller. A class of these devices receiving increasing attention are referred to as bio-hybrid actuators: tools that integrate biological cells or subcellular parts with synthetic or inorganic components. These devices are commonly controlled through magnetic manipulation as magnetic fields and gradients can be generated with a high level of control. Recent work has demonstrated that magnetic bio-hybrid actuators can address common challenges in small scale fabrication, control, and localization. Additionally, it is becoming apparent that these magnetically driven bio-hybrid devices can display high efficiency and, in many cases, have the potential for self-repair and even self-replication. Combining these properties with magnetically driven forces and torques, which can be transmitted over significant distances, can be highly controlled, and are biologically safe, gives magnetic bio-hybrid actuators significant advantages over other classes of small scale actuators. In this review, we describe the theory and mechanisms required for magnetic actuation, classify bio-hybrid actuators by their diverse organic components, and discuss their current limitations. Insights into the future of coupling cells and cell-derived components with magnetic materials to fabricate multi-functional actuators are also provided.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2000202 2000330
NSF-PAR ID:
10319701
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Nanoscale
Volume:
14
Issue:
12
ISSN:
2040-3364
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Shape-memory actuators allow machines ranging from robots to medical implants to hold their form without continuous power, a feature especially advantageous for situations where these devices are untethered and power is limited. Although previous work has demonstrated shape-memory actuators using polymers, alloys, and ceramics, the need for micrometer-scale electro–shape-memory actuators remains largely unmet, especially ones that can be driven by standard electronics (~1 volt). Here, we report on a new class of fast, high-curvature, low-voltage, reconfigurable, micrometer-scale shape-memory actuators. They function by the electrochemical oxidation/reduction of a platinum surface, creating a strain in the oxidized layer that causes bending. They bend to the smallest radius of curvature of any electrically controlled microactuator (~500 nanometers), are fast (<100-millisecond operation), and operate inside the electrochemical window of water, avoiding bubble generation associated with oxygen evolution. We demonstrate that these shape-memory actuators can be used to create basic electrically reconfigurable microscale robot elements including actuating surfaces, origami-based three-dimensional shapes, morphing metamaterials, and mechanical memory elements. Our shape-memory actuators have the potential to enable the realization of adaptive microscale structures, bio-implantable devices, and microscopic robots.

     
    more » « less
  2. Abstract

    Programming magnetic fields with microscale control can enable automation at the scale of single cells ≈10 µm. Most magnetic materials provide a consistent magnetic field over time but the direction or field strength at the microscale is not easily modulated. However, magnetostrictive materials, when coupled with ferroelectric material (i.e., strain‐mediated multiferroics), can undergo magnetization reorientation due to voltage‐induced strain, promising refined control of magnetization at the micrometer‐scale. This work demonstrates the largest single‐domain microstructures (20 µm) of Terfenol‐D (Tb0.3Dy0.7Fe1.92), a material that has the highest magnetostrictive strain of any known soft magnetoelastic material. These Terfenol‐D microstructures enable controlled localization of magnetic beads with sub‐micrometer precision. Magnetically labeled cells are captured by the field gradients generated from the single‐domain microstructures without an external magnetic field. The magnetic state on these microstructures is switched through voltage‐induced strain, as a result of the strain‐mediated converse magnetoelectric effect, to release individual cells using a multiferroic approach. These electronically addressable micromagnets pave the way for parallelized multiferroics‐based single‐cell sorting under digital control for biotechnology applications.

     
    more » « less
  3. null (Ed.)
    Hybrid organic–inorganic composites possessing both electronic and magnetic properties are promising materials for a wide range of applications. Controlled and ordered arrangement of the organic and inorganic components is key for synergistic cooperation toward desired functions. In this work, we report the self-assemblies of core–shell composite nanofibers from conjugated block copolymers and magnetic nanoparticles through the cooperation of orthogonal non-covalent interactions. We show that well-defined core–shell conjugated polymer nanofibers can be obtained through solvent induced self-assembly and polymer crystallization, while hydroxy and pyridine functional groups located at the shell of nanofibers can immobilize magnetic nanoparticles via hydrogen bonding and coordination interactions. These precisely arranged nanostructures possess electronic properties intrinsic to the polymers and are simultaneously responsive to external magnetic fields. We applied these composite nanofibers in organic solar cells and found that these non-covalent interactions led to controlled thin film morphologies containing uniformly dispersed nanoparticles, although high loadings of these inorganic components negatively impact device performance. Our methodology is general and can be utilized to control the spatial distribution of functionalized organic/inorganic building blocks, and the magnetic responsiveness and optoelectronic activities of these nanostructures may lead to new opportunities in energy and electronic applications. 
    more » « less
  4. Polymer nanocomposites have been sought after for their light weight, high performance (strength-to-mass ratio, renewability, etc.), and multi-functionality (actuation, sensing, protection against lightning strikes, etc.). Nano-/micro-engineering has achieved such advanced properties by controlling crystallinity, phases, and interfaces/interphases; hierarchical structuring, often bio-inspired, has been also implemented. While driven by the advanced properties of nanofillers, properties of polymer nanocomposites are critically affected by their structuring and interfaces/interphases due to their small size (< ~50 nm) and large surface area per volume. Measures of their property improvement by nanofiller addition are often smaller than theoretically predicted. Currently, application of these novel engineered materials is limited because these materials cannot often be made in large sizes without compromising nano-scale organization, and because their multi-scale structure-property relationships are not well understood. In this work, we study precise and fast nanofiller structuring with non-contact and energy-efficient application of oscillating magnetic fields. Magnetic assembly is a promising, scalable method to deliver bulk amount of nanocomposites while maintaining organized nanofiller structure throughout the composite volume. In the past, we have demonstrated controlled alignment of nanofillers with tunable inter-assembly distances with application of oscillating one-dimentional magnetic fields (~100s of G), by taking advantage of both magnetic attraction and repulsion. The low oscillation frequency (< 1 Hz) was tuned to achieve maghemite nanofiller alignment patterns, in an epoxy matrix, with different amount of inter-nanofiller contacts with the same nanofiller volume fraction (see Figure 1a). This work was recently expanded to three-dimensional assembly using a triaxial Helmholtz coil system (see Figure 1b); the system can apply the triaxial magnetic fields of varying magnitude (max. ±300G, ±250G, ±180G (x-y-z)) and frequency (0 to 1 Hz, ~0.1 Hz resolution) with controlled phase delay to the sample size of 1.5” x 2.5” x 3.5”(x-y-z). Two model systems are currently studied: maghemite nanofillers in an elastomer for magnetoactuation, and nickel-coated CNTs in an thermoset for mehcniacl and transport property reinforcement. The assembled nanofiller structures are currently characterized by microCT; microCT scan data (see Figure 1b) are segmented through a machine learning algorithm, and will be modeled for their transport properties using a Monte Carlo method. These estimated properties will be compared with the experimentally characterized mechanical, transport, and actuation properties, providing the structure-interphase-property relationships. In future, we plan to integrate these nanocomposites to CFRPs for interlaminar property reinforcement, possibly with an out-of-autoclave composite processing. 
    more » « less
  5. The integration of synthetic biology and soft robotics can fundamentally advance sensory, diagnostic, and therapeutic functionality of bioinspired machines. However, such integration is currently impeded by the lack of soft-matter architectures that interface synthetic cells with electronics and actuators for controlled stimulation and response during robotic operation. Here, we synthesized a soft gripper that uses engineered bacteria for detecting chemicals in the environment, a flexible light-emitting diode (LED) circuit for converting biological to electronic signals, and soft pneu-net actuators for converting the electronic signals to movement of the gripper. We show that the hybrid bio-LED-actuator module enabled the gripper to detect chemical signals by applying pressure and releasing the contents of a chemical-infused hydrogel. The biohybrid gripper used chemical sensing and feedback to make actionable decisions during a pick-and-place operation. This work opens previously unidentified avenues in soft materials, synthetic biology, and integrated interfacial robotic systems. 
    more » « less