Neuromuscular actuation of biohybrid motile bots
ORAL
Abstract
The integration of muscle cells with soft robotics in recent years has led to the development of biohybrid machines capable of untethered locomotion. A major frontier that currently remains unexplored is neuronal actuation and control of such muscle-powered biohybrid machines. As a step toward this goal, we computationally designed, optimized, and implemented light-sensitive flagellar swimmers driven by on-board neuromuscular units. The body of the swimmer consists of a free-standing soft scaffold, skeletal muscle tissue, and optogenetic stem cell-derived neural cluster containing motor neurons. Neural stimulation triggers cyclic muscle contractions, driving time-irreversible flagellar dynamics, thereby providing thrust for untethered forward locomotion of the swimmer. Overall, this work demonstrates an example of a biohybrid robot implementing neuromuscular actuation and illustrates a path toward the forward design and control of neuron-enabled biohybrid machines.
*NSF Science and Technology Center for Emergent Behaviors of Integrated Cellular Systems Grant 0939511
NSF Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation (EFRI): Continuum, Compliant, and Configurable Soft Robotics Engineering (C3 SoRo) Grant 1830881
NSF Career Award 1846742
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Presenters
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Mattia Gazzola
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign