DocumentCode
111009
Title
Vibration-Induced Frictional Reduction in Miniature Intracorporeal Robots
Author
Sfakiotakis, Michael ; Pateromichelakis, N. ; Tsakiris, Dimitris P.
Author_Institution
Inst. of Comput. Sci., Found. for Res. & Technol., Heraklion, Greece
Volume
30
Issue
5
fYear
2014
fDate
Oct. 2014
Firstpage
1210
Lastpage
1221
Abstract
The locomotion of miniature medical robots in the interior of the human body, possibly in contact with the tissue of organs and vessels, is a challenging problem in robotics, which, if properly addressed, might favorably impact several significant applications. This paper investigates the potential of employing relatively low-frequency vibrations, generated by an on-board eccentric motor, to reduce friction for such robots, moving by some other primary mechanism over and in contact with liver tissue. This study focuses on the computational modeling and the experimental assessment of the interaction between vibratory-actuated miniature robots and compliant tissue. The computational model developed to analyze the effect of such vibrations, for a robot moving over a substrate with normal-wise viscoelasticity, is employing a modified Dahl model with viscous damping for the tangential friction. Experiments with a vibratory-actuated platform pulled over ex-vivo bovine liver tissue indicate that the friction reduces as the frequency of vibrations increases, in a manner consistent with the model´s predictions, reaching a reduction of up to 40%.
Keywords
blood vessels; compliant mechanisms; damping; friction; liver; medical robotics; vibration control; viscoelasticity; Dahl model; computational modeling; ex-vivo bovine liver tissue; human organs; low-frequency vibrations; miniature intracorporeal robots; miniature medical robots; normal-wise viscoelasticity; on-board eccentric motor; tangential friction; vessels; vibration-induced frictional reduction; vibratory-actuated miniature robots; viscous damping; Computational modeling; Force; Friction; Prototypes; Robots; Substrates; Vibrations; Endoscopic capsule; medical robots and systems; motion control; vibratory actuation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Robotics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1552-3098
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TRO.2014.2334931
Filename
6866203
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