Medical science is advancing with research pioneered at Hokkaido University on super bots capable of swimming in blood to deliver medicine and perform other microscopic tasks.

Maki Matsuda, JAPAN Forward

A research team at Hokkaido University led by Assistant Professor Yoshiyuki Kageyama announced in 2021 that they have successfully produced a robot smaller than one millimeter that can swim like a fish by paddling through the water. This technology has the potential to be the groundwork for molecular robots that freely swim through blood vessels to transport drugs.

Behind the research lies a certain physical theory.

Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Creating a tiny robot that can fit into narrow spaces like a blood vessel is the stuff of science fiction novels and movies. Research on assembling molecules into tiny machines through chemical reactions is now interesting to scientists worldwide.

For example, the 2016 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was jointly awarded to three people who contributed to the design and synthesis of molecular machinery: Jean-Pierre Sauvage of the University of Strasbourg in France, Sir J. Fraser Stoddart of Northwestern University in the US, and Bernard L. Feringa of the University of Groningen in the Netherlands.

The standard assumption in physics has been that small objects cannot move through water with a fluttering motion. The scallop theorem is a formal expression of the difficulties posed.

For a small robot, forces like gravity and buoyancy proportional to its size are weak, but viscous resistance significantly hinders its smooth movement through liquids. For this reason, if the body of a prospective robot bends to move forward, it will typically return to its previous position within a liquid when it assumes its original shape.

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By - grape Japan editorial staff.