窪蹋勛圖厙

Tags
  • Innovation and Research
Features & Articles

Modeling Particle Movements on Bees and Bacteria Could Lead to Robotics Advances

illustration with bees on the left and a model of particles on the right
Before any business can take place at meetings, whether it be the local borough or a committee at work, a certain number of members need to be in attendance. This is called reaching quorum.

It turns out, the same thing also happens on a microscopic level. For instance, bacteria exhibit a behavior called quorum sensing.

When there are one or two bacteria, they behave in a certain way, said Anna Balazs, Distinguished professor ofChemical Engineering and the John A. Swanson Chair of Engineering at the 窪蹋勛圖厙 of 窪蹋勛圖厙s . But suddenly, when there is a critical threshold of bacteria, the bacteria can sense this increase in population and they dramatically change their behavior.

In other words, the bacteria have reached a quorum.

Other examples of quorum sensing in living beings include how honey bees select locations for new hives or bioluminescence in deep-sea squid.

Now imagine that type of behavior in machines. Thats what Balazs and collaborator Henry Shum at the 窪蹋勛圖厙 of Waterloo in Canada have been researching. The duo has mimicked quorum sensing behavior in synthetic nonliving materials, which could lead to mechanical devices with the ability for self-recognition and self-regulation.

in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

woman in a purple sweater
The findings buildoff of a the pair published in 2015, where three microscopic synthetic capsules reacted and moved toward each other using chemical signaling.

They have a bioinspired behavior that enables them to come together and form small groups, Shum said.

This most recent study, however, modeled a large number of microcapsules and found that, once quorum was met, synthetic particles reacted autonomously to produce distinct oscillations in chemical signals. The oscillations indicate to the other particles that there is a quorum.

I dont want to say the particles are self-aware, but they can perform this simple, elementary lifelike function, Balazs said.

Balazs added that these particles ability to count shows potential blurred lines between what is living and nonliving.

Balazs and Shum said their findings could lead to advancements in soft robotics, a sub-field dealing with the construction of robots from highly flexible materials, similar to those found in living organisms.

Their findings could also inspire new mechano-responsive materials, such as polymer gels with embedded quorum sensing elements that would activate a certain chemical behavior when compressed, and then switch off when stretched or when a specific temperature is reached.

For example: You could have a robotic skin that solidifies to protect itself at a certain temperature, and then becomes squishy again when the temperature drops to a nominal level, Balazs said.

In the future, Balazs and Shum will combine aspects of their work by studying how larger microscopic systems react and move toward each other to build different structures.