Microrockets and Motors Developed to Propel Tiny Machines Inside of Our Body

First Posted: Apr 12, 2013 03:16 PM EDT
Close

Futuristic medical micromachines operating like submarines inside of our body have long been the subject of visionary books or movies, and are coming closer to being realized. Advancements in micromotor technology are now opening the door to broad new medical and industrial uses for these tiny devices, scientists announced at the national American Chemical Society meeting this week.

Joseph Wang, D.Sc., who leads research on the motors, said that efforts to build such self-powered robot devices, using their environment to fuel and propel themselves, have evoked memories of the 1966 science fiction film Fantastic Voyage. It featured a miniaturized submarine, which doctors injected into a patient. It then navigated through blood vessels to remove a blood clot in the brain.

“We have developed the first self-propelled micromotors and microrockets that use the surrounding natural environment as a source of fuel,” Wang said. “The stomach, for instance, has a strongly acid environment that helps digest food. Some of our microrockets use that acid as fuel, producing bubbles of hydrogen gas for thrust and propulsion.

“The use of biocompatible fuels is attractive for avoiding damage to healthy tissue in the body. We envision that these machines could someday perform microsurgery, clean clogged arteries or transport drugs to the right place in the body. But there are also possible uses in cleaning up oil spills, monitoring industrial processes and in national security.”

Wei Gao, a graduate student in Wang’s lab, described how the team at the University of California, San Diego has developed two types of self-propelled vehicles — microrockets made of zinc and micromotors made of aluminum. The tubular zinc micromotor is one of the world’s fastest, able to move 100 times its 0.0004-inch length in just one second. That’s like a sprinter running 400 miles per hour.

The zinc lining is biocompatible. It reacts with the hydrochloric acid in the stomach, which consists of hydrogen and chloride ions. It releases the hydrogen gas as a stream of tiny bubbles, which propel the motor forward. “This rocket would be ideal to deliver drugs or to capture diseased cells in the stomach,” said Gao.

Gao also described some of the latest advances in the technology. The newest vehicles are first-of-their-kind aluminum micromotors. One type, which also contains gallium, uses water as a fuel. It splits water to generate hydrogen bubbles, which move the motor. “About 70 percent of the human body is water, so this would be an ideal fuel for vehicles with medical uses, such as microsurgery,” said Wang. “They also could have uses in clinical diagnostic tests, in the environment and in security applications.”

Another type of aluminum micromotor doesn’t have gallium and is the first such motor that can use multiple fuels. “We’re really excited about this micromotor,” said Gao. “It is our most flexible one to date. For the first time, we’ve made a micromotor that can use three different fuels — acids, bases and hydrogen peroxide, depending upon its surroundings. Therefore, we can use these motors in many more environments than ever before.”

The scientists are working on extending the lifetimes of the vehicles so that they last longer and functionalizing them for specific biomedical applications. They also are exploring commercial partners for realizing real-life applications of this work, said Wang.

See Now: NASA's Juno Spacecraft's Rendezvous With Jupiter's Mammoth Cyclone

©2024 ScienceWorldReport.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. The window to the world of science news.

Join the Conversation

Real Time Analytics