Investigating Tissue Mechanics in vitro Using Untethered Soft Robotic Microdevices

Front Robot AI. 2021 Mar 18:8:649765. doi: 10.3389/frobt.2021.649765. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

This paper presents the design, fabrication, and operation of a soft robotic compression device that is remotely powered by laser illumination. We combined the rapid and wireless response of hybrid nanomaterials with state-of-the-art microengineering techniques to develop machinery that can apply physiologically relevant mechanical loading. The passive hydrogel structures that constitute the compliant skeleton of the machines were fabricated using single-step in situ polymerization process and directly incorporated around the actuators without further assembly steps. Experimentally validated computational models guided the design of the compression mechanism. We incorporated a cantilever beam to the prototype for life-time monitoring of mechanical properties of cell clusters on optical microscopes. The mechanical and biochemical compatibility of the chosen materials with living cells together with the on-site manufacturing process enable seamless interfacing of soft robotic devices with biological specimen.

Keywords: 3D tissue constructs; hydrogels; mechanobiolgy; microfabrication; plasmonics; soft robotics.