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Machine learning–driven design of engineered cilia enables hybrid operations in acoustic microrobots

Nature Communications 2026 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yun Ling, Yujing Lu, Joseph Rich, Mingyuan Liu, Xianchen Xu, Ty Naquin, Ying Chen, Shanglin Li, Ruoyu Zhong, Kaichun Yang, Shuaiguo Zhao, Qian WU, Ke Jin, Tony Jun Huang

Summary

Scientists have created tiny robots with hair-like structures that can bend, rotate, and change shape inside the human body using sound waves. These microscopic robots could potentially deliver drugs precisely to diseased areas or perform minimally invasive medical procedures. While still in early development, this technology could lead to new treatments that are less harmful than current surgical methods.

Microrobotic systems offer significant potential for precision medicine by enabling minimally invasive interventions in complex fluidic environments. However, effective operation in these settings requires actuators capable of more than simple linear or rotational motion, often necessitating programmable changes in both direction and shape. This remains a major challenge due to fundamental constraints in the design and control of microscale actuators, particularly in acoustic systems. Here, we introduce engineered cilia for hybrid operations microrobots, a class of acoustic microrobots that use geometry-tuned cilia and resonance-induced forces to execute complex motions such as bidirectional bending, controllable rotation, and adaptive morphing. The microrobots design is driven by a self-augmenting machine learning framework integrated with finite element analysis, enabling rapid prediction and optimization of geometry-resonance relationships across design space. This approach achieves >10⁵-fold reduction in prediction time and over 20-fold in memory savings, while maintaining >90% accuracy in peak amplitude and >98% in resonance frequency. Compliant mechanism strategies further expand the mechanical versatility of the microrobots, enabling programmable shape transformations tailored to specific tasks. These advances establish acoustic-driven microrobots as a scalable and efficient platform for intelligent microrobotic actuation in biomedical and microfluidic applications.

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