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Functionalization of Situated Robots via Vapour

Kadri-Ann Pankratov, Leonid Zinatullin, Adele Metsniit, Marie Vihmar, Indrek Must

Abstract

Tight matching with the environment is key to effective robot operation in complex settings. Situated robots that build their bodies in situ (e.g. by spinning) are uniquely positioned to exploit their surroundings, yet functionalization of these structures remains an integration challenge - multimaterial spinning requires complex spinneret multiplexing, and mixture doping is limited by additive availability and chemical stability. We propose instead using materials available in the environment to functionalize in situ spun webs, reducing payload and uniquely matching the structure to its surroundings. As a demonstration, we transform an optically scattering PVDF fiber web into an optically absorbing, polypyrrole-grafted structure via pyrrole vapour exposure. Two activator-delivery strategies are shown: liquid infusion into a prefabricated web, and activator pre-embedding in the spinning mixture. Beyond this proof-of-concept, we foresee broader applications including biohybrid robots that exploit bacterial genomes for specific biomolecule synthesis in situ.

Functionalization of Situated Robots via Vapour

Abstract

Tight matching with the environment is key to effective robot operation in complex settings. Situated robots that build their bodies in situ (e.g. by spinning) are uniquely positioned to exploit their surroundings, yet functionalization of these structures remains an integration challenge - multimaterial spinning requires complex spinneret multiplexing, and mixture doping is limited by additive availability and chemical stability. We propose instead using materials available in the environment to functionalize in situ spun webs, reducing payload and uniquely matching the structure to its surroundings. As a demonstration, we transform an optically scattering PVDF fiber web into an optically absorbing, polypyrrole-grafted structure via pyrrole vapour exposure. Two activator-delivery strategies are shown: liquid infusion into a prefabricated web, and activator pre-embedding in the spinning mixture. Beyond this proof-of-concept, we foresee broader applications including biohybrid robots that exploit bacterial genomes for specific biomolecule synthesis in situ.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 4 sections, 1 figure.

Figures (1)

  • Figure 2: Fig 1. A, Situtated body functionalization concept. B, Spinning on supports: porous tube for activator introduction via infusion (top), and 3D printed bioinspired support for embedded activator in the web mixture. C, Scaffold activation in a Py vapour environment. D, Infusion and functionalisation of web on the porous tube. E, Functionalization process of the web with embedded activator. Scale bars: (D- left, E-left) - 1cm, (D - right top) - 1mm, (D-right bottom, E - right) - 100µm