Behind the Paper, From the Editors

An Ultrasonic Microrobot Enabling Ultrafast Bidirectional Navigation in Confined Tubular Environments

A research team led by Professor Bin Yang from Shanghai Jiao Tong University has developed an ultrasonic microrobot capable of ultrafast bidirectional navigation in confined tubular environments, as reported in Nano-Micro Letters. By integrating frequency-modulated ultrasonic actuation with a flexible piezoelectric composite structure, this work sets a new benchmark for miniaturized robotic inspection systems.

Design Concept

  • Bio-Inspired Motion: Inspired by the centipede’s retrograde wave gait, the robot converts ultrasonic vibrations into traveling bending waves, generating controllable thrust through frictional coupling with pipe walls.
  • Ultrathin Piezoelectric Structure: The robot integrates a thinned lead zirconate titanate (PZT) film with a flexible PET substrate via MEMS fabrication, encapsulated by a parylene-C layer. The compact design (24 mm × 7 mm × 210 μm, 80 mg) ensures high flexibility and adaptability.
  • Frequency-Modulated Direction Control: Bidirectional locomotion is achieved simply by tuning the driving frequency, allowing seamless forward and backward motion without structural adjustment.

Performance Achievements

  • Record Speed and Low Voltage: The microrobot reaches a maximum speed of 81 cm s-1, surpassing all reported piezoelectric microrobots. It operates at an exceptionally low driving voltage of 3 Vp-p, two orders of magnitude below dielectric elastomer systems.
  • High Adaptability: It maintains stable movement in 4 mm-high pipes, climbs slopes up to 24.25°, and carries loads over 36 times its own weight.
  • Environmental Versatility: The robot performs robustly in glass, stainless steel, and PVC pipelines, and even moves across water surfaces, demonstrating superior sealing and environmental tolerance.

Functional Demonstrations

  • Real-Time Visual Inspection: A micro-endoscope camera enables real-time imaging inside confined pipelines, proving its potential for internal inspection and diagnostics.
  • Application Potential: The system offers a powerful platform for pipeline inspection, medical microdevices, and microfluidic monitoring, where compact and agile robots are essential.

Future Outlook

  • Toward Autonomous Systems: Future designs will integrate onboard power units, wireless modules, and micro-batteries for untethered, autonomous operation.
  • Expanded Capabilities: Combining sensing, imaging, and manipulation functions will transform this design into a multifunctional micro-inspection system.

With its ultrathin architecture, low power demand, and scalable fabrication, this microrobot establishes a foundation for next-generation intelligent microrobotics in industrial and biomedical applications.