Toy-Like Microboat Could Carry Tiny Cargoes
Toy-Like Microboat Could Carry Tiny Cargoes
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Now, Luo, an associate professor in mechanical and aerospace engineering, along with PhD student Hao Li, and post-doctoral fellow Xinchuan Liu, have taken a second look at the toy boats to see if a similar mechanism might be useful for transporting targets in microfluidics systems.
Now, Luo, an associate professor in mechanical and aerospace engineering, along with PhD student Hao Li, and post-doctoral fellow Xinchuan Liu, have taken a second look at the toy boats to see if a similar mechanism might be useful for transporting targets in microfluidics systems.
“I have a 2-year-old son. When
seeing him play with toys with a big smile on his face, I often recall
what I did as a kid,” Luo told PhysOrg.com.
“One day, this toy boat idea came into my mind, mostly for fun at that
time. Later on, after digging deeper into this idea, I realized that,
in addition to serving as toys, these small boats could also have two
direct applications: material supply and sensing detection. They might
be used to deliver materials to a particular location in a microchannel
for chemical or biological analysis, or could be applied to carry
sensors through a liquid sample for detecting toxic targets.”
But with dimensions of just a few millimeters, microboats require
very different design and manufacturing techniques than those used for
conventional-sized boats. Researchers have investigated several
microfabrication techniques for these tiny objects, although many
approaches involve complicated structures and systems.
But a surface-tension-based propulsive method, like the
oil-propelled boat, could offer a simpler alternative for propelling
micro-sized objects. And – as the Texas researchers show in their
current study – the method can offer good mobility, with the microboats
reaching speeds of 30 cm per second.
“This propulsion method makes good use of the fore-and-aft surface
tensions difference,” Luo said. “It only needs the addition of fuel to
the reservoir of a microboat. The microboat moves on its own. As such,
this method eliminates the use of any complicated systems, such as
propellers, rudders, anchors, and their control systems, which are
normally required in macroboats. Furthermore, it does not need any
external devices to provide piezoelectric, thermal, electrostatic, or
magnetostatic forces, which are commonly employed in microfluidic
applications to drive fluids.”
In their study, the researchers built a simple 19.5-mg-microboat
out of two layers of SU-8 polymers. Since SU-8 has a density slightly
greater than that of water, surface tension plays an important role in
keeping the microboat afloat. Although the microboat floats when placed
on top of the water, when pressed down, it sinks due to its slightly
greater density.
Using UV lithography, the
engineers etched a reservoir and nozzle in the top layer of the boat
for holding and dispersing isopropyl alcohol (IPA), the propellant they
chose. Like oil, IPA has a much smaller surface tension than water, and
also may cause less contamination than oil, making it ideal for
testing.
After partially filling the microboat’s 1.49-microliter-reservoir,
the researchers performed experiments in channels of water with
different depths and lengths. They found that the microboat traveled
faster in shallower water (for example: 1.0 second per 30 cm in a
1.0-mm depth; 1.83 seconds per 30 cm in a 9.4-mm depth).
The speed difference, the researchers explained, is partly due to
greater resistance on the microboat in deeper water. Because the
channel narrows toward the top, the gaps between the microboat and the
channel walls become much smaller than the gap between the microboat
and the bottom as the depth increases. This combination increases the
microboat’s overall resistance, and makes it take longer to reach the
end of the channel. Further, this increase in travel time allows more
time for water to mix in with the IPA in the reservoir, diluting the
“fuel” and further slowing the microboat.
The researchers also tested the microboat in a 94.5-cm-long (and
9.4-mm-deep) channel, and found that the microboat could travel 91.4 cm
in 5.33 seconds. Due to an inconsistency in the long channel’s bottom
surface, they did not test the microboat in shallower water. But based
on the results from the 30-cm-channel, they expect that its speed would
likely increase in shallow water.
Propelling microboats with this kind of surface-tension-based
method could be useful in a variety of applications. As Luo explained,
further studies of the microboats’ motions in microchannels could
provide insight into real boats as well as microboats.
“The motions of macroboats in narrow canals and near seaports have
some common points [with microboats]: the boats are moving in shallow
water or near banks,” he said. “Due to the concern of experimental
cost, the behaviors of large-scale ships are often explored in research
labs by testing model ships, which are tens or hundreds of times
smaller than their real counterparts. I am thinking of using these
microboats to play some roles of the model ships. The reason behind
this is simple. They are much smaller than those model ships, and thus
are quite cost-effective to build and test.
“Finally, in the long run,” he added, “the successful development
of these microboats should form a foundation for developing micro
‘submarines,’ and further exploring implantable micro ‘submarines,’
which would be capable of traveling in blood vessels for active drug
delivery, and disease diagnosis and treatment.”
...
via physorg
Toy-Like Microboat Could Carry Tiny Cargoes,Cheng Luo, ChengLuo, invention, medical, medicine, microboat, microboats

