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Author

Panayiota Katsamba

Other affiliations: University of Cambridge
Bio: Panayiota Katsamba is an academic researcher from University of Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rotating magnetic field & Classification of discontinuities. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications receiving 269 citations. Previous affiliations of Panayiota Katsamba include University of Cambridge.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of hydrodynamic forces and rheology of local surroundings on swimming at low Reynolds number was analyzed, and a suite of machinery for building untethered microrobots with self-regulated mobility was developed.
Abstract: Bacteria can exploit mechanics to display remarkable plasticity in response to locally changing physical and chemical conditions. Compliant structures play a striking role in their taxis behavior, specifically for navigation inside complex and structured environments. Bioinspired mechanisms with rationally designed architectures capable of large, nonlinear deformation present opportunities for introducing autonomy into engineered small-scale devices. This work analyzes the effect of hydrodynamic forces and rheology of local surroundings on swimming at low Reynolds number, identifies the challenges and benefits of utilizing elastohydrodynamic coupling in locomotion, and further develops a suite of machinery for building untethered microrobots with self-regulated mobility. We demonstrate that coupling the structural and magnetic properties of artificial microswimmers with the dynamic properties of the fluid leads to adaptive locomotion in the absence of on-board sensors.

170 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that coupling the structural and magnetic properties of artificial microswimmers with the dynamic properties of the fluid leads to adaptive locomotion in the absence of on-board sensors, and a suite of machinery for building untethered microrobots with self-regulated mobility is developed.
Abstract: Bacteria can exploit mechanics to display remarkable plasticity in response to locally changing physical and chemical conditions. Compliant structures play a notable role in their taxis behavior, specifically for navigation inside complex and structured environments. Bioinspired mechanisms with rationally designed architectures capable of large, nonlinear deformation present opportunities for introducing autonomy into engineered small-scale devices. This work analyzes the effect of hydrodynamic forces and rheology of local surroundings on swimming at low Reynolds number, identifies the challenges and benefits of using elastohydrodynamic coupling in locomotion, and further develops a suite of machinery for building untethered microrobots with self-regulated mobility. We demonstrate that coupling the structural and magnetic properties of artificial microswimmers with the dynamic properties of the fluid leads to adaptive locomotion in the absence of on-board sensors.

121 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a transchiral micromotor with magnetized spirals of opposite handedness is proposed to control individual micrometers by varying the frequency of the rotating magnetic field.
Abstract: Magnetic microrobots that swim through liquid media are of interest for minimally invasive medical procedures, bioengineering, and manufacturing. Many of the envisaged applications, such as micromanipulation and targeted cargo delivery, necessitate the use and adequate control of multiple microrobots, which will increase the velocity, robustness, and efficacy of a procedure. While various methods involving heterogeneous geometries, magnetic properties, and surface chemistries have been proposed to enhance independent control, the main challenge has been that the motion between all microswimmers remains coupled through the global control signal of the magnetic field. Katsamba and Lauga [Phys. Rev. Appl. 5, 064019 (2016)] proposed transchiral microrobots, a theoretical design with magnetized spirals of opposite handedness. The competition between the spirals can be tuned to give an intrinsic nonlinearity that each device can function only within a given band of frequencies. This allows individual microrobots to be selectively controlled by varying the frequency of the rotating magnetic field. Here, we present the experimental realization and characterization of transchiral micromotors composed of independently driven magnetic helices. We show a swimming micromotor that yields negligible net motion until a critical frequency is reached and a micromotor that changes its translation direction as a function of the frequency of the rotating magnetic field. This work demonstrates a crucial step toward completely decoupled and addressable swimming magnetic microrobots.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the nonlinear behavior of a magnetized helix driven by a rotating magnetic field was exploited for control of multiple swimmers for use in noninvasive medicine.
Abstract: In developing artificial swimmers for use in noninvasive medicine, control of multiple microbots is of paramount importance. This study exploits the nonlinear behavior of a magnetized helix driven by a rotating magnetic field, by considering motors in which helices of opposite handedness dynamically compete against one another. One can design a velocity profile that is nonnegligible only within a chosen interval of operating frequencies, thus providing a selective control mechanism for the active matter. Arbitrarily complex velocity-frequency relationships are possible.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work demonstrates a crucial step towards completely decoupled and addressable swimming magnetic microrobots by showing a swimming micromotor that yields negligible net motion until a critical frequency is reached and a micronotor that changes its translation direction as a function of the frequency of the rotating magnetic field.
Abstract: Magnetic microrobots that swim through liquid media are of interest for minimally invasive medical procedures, bioengineering, and manufacturing. Many of the envisaged applications, such as micromanipulation and targeted cargo delivery, necessitate the use and adequate control of multiple microrobots, which will increase the velocity, robustness, and efficacy of a procedure. While various methods involving heterogeneous geometries, magnetic properties, and surface chemistries have been proposed to enhance independent control, the main challenge has been that the motion between all microwsimmers remains coupled through the global control signal of the magnetic field. Katsamba and Lauga proposed transchiral microrobots, a theoretical design with magnetized spirals of opposite handedness. The competition between the spirals can be tuned to give an intrinsic nonlinearity that each device can function only within a given band of frequencies. This allows individual microrobots to be selectively controlled by varying the frequency of the rotating magnetic field. Here we present the experimental realization and characterization of transchiral micromotors composed of independently driven magnetic helices. We show a swimming micromotor that yields negligible net motion until a critical frequency is reached and a micromotor that changes its translation direction as a function of the frequency of the rotating magnetic field. This work demonstrates a crucial step towards completely decoupled and addressable swimming magnetic microrobots.

15 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: MagRobots as discussed by the authors introduce fundamental concepts and advantages of magnetic micro/nanorobots as well as basic knowledge of magnetic fields and magnetic materials, setups for magnetic manipulation, magnetic field configurations, and symmetry-breaking strategies for effective movement.
Abstract: Manipulation and navigation of micro and nanoswimmers in different fluid environments can be achieved by chemicals, external fields, or even motile cells Many researchers have selected magnetic fields as the active external actuation source based on the advantageous features of this actuation strategy such as remote and spatiotemporal control, fuel-free, high degree of reconfigurability, programmability, recyclability, and versatility This review introduces fundamental concepts and advantages of magnetic micro/nanorobots (termed here as "MagRobots") as well as basic knowledge of magnetic fields and magnetic materials, setups for magnetic manipulation, magnetic field configurations, and symmetry-breaking strategies for effective movement These concepts are discussed to describe the interactions between micro/nanorobots and magnetic fields Actuation mechanisms of flagella-inspired MagRobots (ie, corkscrew-like motion and traveling-wave locomotion/ciliary stroke motion) and surface walkers (ie, surface-assisted motion), applications of magnetic fields in other propulsion approaches, and magnetic stimulation of micro/nanorobots beyond motion are provided followed by fabrication techniques for (quasi-)spherical, helical, flexible, wire-like, and biohybrid MagRobots Applications of MagRobots in targeted drug/gene delivery, cell manipulation, minimally invasive surgery, biopsy, biofilm disruption/eradication, imaging-guided delivery/therapy/surgery, pollution removal for environmental remediation, and (bio)sensing are also reviewed Finally, current challenges and future perspectives for the development of magnetically powered miniaturized motors are discussed

219 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The demonstration involved a tall rectangular transparent vessel of corn syrup, projected by an overhead projector turned on its side, and the figures reproduce transparencies used in the talk.

211 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss new materials and structural designs for the engineering of soft actuators with physical intelligence and advanced properties, such as adaptability, multimodal locomotion, self-healing and multi-responsiveness.
Abstract: Inspired by physically adaptive, agile, reconfigurable and multifunctional soft-bodied animals and human muscles, soft actuators have been developed for a variety of applications, including soft grippers, artificial muscles, wearables, haptic devices and medical devices. However, the complex performance of biological systems cannot yet be fully replicated in synthetic designs. In this Review, we discuss new materials and structural designs for the engineering of soft actuators with physical intelligence and advanced properties, such as adaptability, multimodal locomotion, self-healing and multi-responsiveness. We examine how performance can be improved and multifunctionality implemented by using programmable soft materials, and highlight important real-world applications of soft actuators. Finally, we discuss the challenges and opportunities for next-generation soft actuators, including physical intelligence, adaptability, manufacturing scalability and reproducibility, extended lifetime and end-of-life strategies. Soft actuators are flexible and compliant and thus perfectly suited to interact with the human body. This Review discusses tethered, untethered and biohybrid soft actuation strategies, highlights promising real-world applications of soft robots and identifies key future challenges, such as implementing physical intelligence and end-of-life strategies.

138 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
08 Dec 2020
TL;DR: An overview of state-of-the-art developments and future perspectives in the multifunctional magnetically responsive soft materials is presented.
Abstract: Magnetically responsive soft materials are soft composites where magnetic fillers are embedded into soft polymeric matrices. These active materials have attracted extensive research and industrial interest due to their ability to realize fast and programmable shape changes through remote and untethered control under the application of magnetic fields. They would have many high-impact potential applications in soft robotics/devices, metamaterials, and biomedical devices. With a broad range of functional magnetic fillers, polymeric matrices, and advanced fabrication techniques, the material properties can be programmed for integrated functions, including programmable shape morphing, dynamic shape deformation-based locomotion, object manipulation and assembly, remote heat generation, as well as reconfigurable electronics. In this review, an overview of state-of-the-art developments and future perspectives in the multifunctional magnetically responsive soft materials is presented.

134 citations