A flexible microrobot which moves without algorithm, hardware, sensors or external commands, it was printed in a 3D microprinter.
Source: TechXplore
Leiden researchers Professor Daniela Kraft and Mengshi Wei have created microscopic robots, which behavior emerges entirely from their shape and the way they interact with their environment. They are only a few tens of micrometers long—far smaller than the width of a human hair—yet these robots can swim, sense, navigate and adapt in ways that look surprisingly life-like. And all this without having a brain.
This class of robots opens up entirely new possibilities for biomedical applications. Their development is reported in PNAS.

This microstructure was printed in a Nanoscribe 3D and moves at 7μm/s. Its joint size is 0.5μm.
Inspiration to build these robots came from nature. Kraft says, “Animals like worms and snakes constantly adapt their shape as they move, which helps them to navigate their environments. Macroscopic robots similarly use flexibility for their function. However, until now, microrobots were either small and rigid, or large and flexible. We wondered if we could realize small and flexible microrobots in our lab.”
To find out, they designed a soft, chain-like structure made up of flexibly connected segments, and printed it using a 3D microprinter. To the researchers’ surprise, switching on an electric field made the chains move. When it starts to swim, its flexibility gives it a life-like appearance.
“When the robot is slowed down or even stopped, it starts to wave its tail as if it wants to break free,” Wei says. “This happens, because the elements in the back still want to move, and they can do so because of their flexibility.”
“But that was not all,” adds Kraft. “We discovered there’s continuous feedback between the shape and motion of the robot: the shape influences how it moves, and its movements in turn alter its shape. This microrobot therefore senses how the environment changes its body and reacts to it, making it appear life-like. This means that we don’t need microscopic electronics for integrating smart abilities.”
Wei says, “When our microrobot encounters an obstacle, it automatically searches for another route. And when two robots meet, they naturally steer away from each other.” The robots can even move in dense environments and move objects that hinder their motion out of their way.
The ability of these microrobots to autonomously navigate complex environments opens exciting possibilities for biomedical applications, from targeted drug delivery to minimally invasive medical procedures and diagnostics.
Kraft says, “We now need to fully understand how such dynamic and functional behaviors emerge. This knowledge will help us develop more advanced microrobots and devices, but also to better understand the physics of biological microswimmers and organisms.”
These videos show some of the robots’ movements.

