Ingestible, Controllable, and Degradable Origami Robot For Patching Stomach Wounds
Ingestible, Controllable, and Degradable Origami Robot For Patching Stomach Wounds
Ingestible, Controllable, and Degradable Origami Robot For Patching Stomach Wounds
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Geethanjali College of Engineering&Technology
(UGC Autonomous)
(Affiliated to JNTUH Approved by AICTE,New Delhi)
Cheeryal (V), Keesara (M), R.R.Dist.-501 301.
DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
Accredited by NBA
G.Anil Kumar(15R11A05K8)
Department of CSE,
Geethanjali College of Engineering
and Technology, Cheeryal.
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Geethanjali College of Engineering &
Technology
(Affiliated to J.N.T.U.H, Approved by AICTE, NEWDELHI.)
Certificate
This is to certify that the Seminar report entitled “Ingestible, Controllable, and
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Finally, I would like to express my heartfelt thanks to my parents who were very
supportive both financially and mentally and for their encouragement to achieve my
set goals.
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ABSTRACT
Developing miniature robots that can carry out versatile clinical
procedures inside the body under the remote instructions of
medical professionals has been a long time challenge. The
origami-based robots that can be ingested into the stomach, loco
mote to a desired location, patch a wound, remove a foreign
body, deliver drugs, and biodegrade. The designed composite
material sheets are biocompatible and biodegradable that can be
encapsulate in ice for delivery through the esophagus, embed a
drug layer that is passively released to a wounded area, and be
remotely controlled to carry out underwater maneuvers specific
to the tasks using magnetic fields. The performances of the
robots are demonstrated in a simulated physical environment
consisting of an esophagus and stomach with properties similar
to the biological organs.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Abstract v
List of Figures viii
CHAPTER.1 INTRODUCTION………………………….. 1
CHAPTER.2 RELATED WORK………………………… 3
CHAPTER.3 STOMACH SIMULATOR……………….... 4
3.1 Artificial stomach fabrication…………….. 4
CHAPTER.4 REMOVEL OF BUTTON BATTERIES …. 5
CHAPTER.5 ROBOT DESIGN AND REMOTE CONTROL. 6
5.1 Robot architecture………………………….. 6
5.2 Ice capsule transportation…………………... 7
5.3 Material selection……………………………. 8
CHAPTER.6 ROBOT MODELS……………………………. 9
6.1 In-capsule rolling motion control…………….. 9
6.2 Walking motion control for the Deliverer… 10
CHAPTER.7 EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS………………. 12
7.1 Robot deployment via capsule melting……… 12
7.2 Ice capsule’s roll and foreign body dislocation..12
CHAPTER.8 ADVANTAGES AND DIS-ADVANTAGES.. 13
CHAPTER.9 APPLICATIONS……………………………….14
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CHAPTER .10 CONCLUSION………………………………15
CHAPTER.11 FUTURE ENHANCEMENT…………………16
CHAPTER.12 REFERENCES……………………………… 17
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LIST OF FIGURES :
5 MATERIAL SELECTION 8
6 ROLLING MODE 9
7 WALKING MODEL 11
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1.INDRODUCTION
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Fig.1.The developed system. An iced robot is transported into an
artificial stomach. Once the ice melt sand the robot is deployed,
the robot is controlled using a remote magnetic field. The robot
removes a foreign body, such as a button battery, from the
location and further treats an inflammation by delivering a drug.
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2.RELATED WORK
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3. STOMACH SIMULTAOR
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5.ROBOT DESIGN AND REMOTE CONTROL
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5.2 Ice Capsule Transportation
Ice capsule transportation has various advantages over other
approaches such as encapsulation by gelatin or sugar. First, it is
safe and reduces friction while sliding through the esophagus by
peristalsis. Second, it disappears quickly and completely in vivo
by melting once it reaches the stomach, and thus it doesn’t
hinder the robot’s motions unlike other materials, which we
realized to be critical. Third, it is easily produced. The ice
capsule is 27.0mm long, almost the same size as the 000
standard pill size (length= 26.14mm, diameter= 9.97mm), and it
melts in water on the order of a minute to a few minutes
depending on the temperature. The size is determined such that
the capsule (mass w = 2.55g, volume 2.22×10−6 m3) sinks in
water considering the robot’s weight (wt = 0.578g), and is
subject to scaling down for children’s’ use. For freezing an ice
capsule robot, we first 3D printed a capsule from ABS material.
Then, we placed the capsule in a silicone mold, molded it, and
retracted the capsule from the mold such that the mold retained
a capsule-shaped hollow space inside. We finally put the robot
in the hollow space, filled it with water, and froze it in a freezer.
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6.1 ROBOT MODELS
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6.2 Walking motion control for the Deliverer
The walking motion is designed based on stick-slip motion on
ground [1]. The robot acts underwater and thus experiences
effects from moving in a low Reynolds number environment.
Fig. 7(b) illustrates the walking motion of the deliverer seen
from the side. The walking motion is easier to control than the
rolling motion with higher precision. The magnetic field is
applied at 5Hz in the direction along which the deliverer is
actuated (the positive x direction in the figure) oscillating
through four angles (Ψ, Ψ/2, −Ψ/2 and−Ψ; Ψ = 1.1rad is the
angle from the horizontal plane). When such an alternating field
is applied, the deliverer can “walk forward” due to the
combination of thrust, asymmetric frictional force induced by
the shape between front and rear, and asymmetric mass balance
of the body. More precisely, one step motion consists of three
distinctive phases; (phase 1) the body is laid on the ground;
(phase 2) the body points down following a downward-oriented
magnetic field; (phase 3) the body points up following an
upward-oriented magnetic field. From phase 1 to phase 2, the
deliverer lifts up the rear while the front is still in contact
keeping the anchor position against thrust and exploiting the
friction (stick motion). The center of mass, assumed to be at the
location of the magnet, travels forward a distance∼ k(1−cosΨ),
where k = 8.7mm is the distance between the center of the
magnet and the front edge. From phase 2 to phase 3, as a turn of
magnetic field occurs instantly, and due to the relatively low
Reynolds environment with negligibly light body mass
compared to the magnet mass, the body is expected to rotate
about the magnet keeping the height of the center of mass (slip
motion).
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FIG:6.2 WALKING MODEL
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7.EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
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8.ADVANTAGES AND DIS-ADVANTAGES
ADVANTAGES
Remove Foreign Objects.
Deliver Medicine to the designated Location
Patch the Wound.
Perform instant Operations using micro-sensor
Predict the upcoming Disease.
DIS-ADVANTAGES
Repeatability
Stable and Untiring
Resistant to Ionising Radiation
Use of Diverse Sensors in Control
Optimized for Particular Environment
Good Degrees of Freedom
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9.APPLICATIONS
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10. CONCLUSION
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11.FUTURE ENHANCEMENT
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12.REFERENCES
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