Will microfluidics enable functionally integrated biohybrid robots?
Miriam FilippiOncay YasaRoger Dale KammRitu RamanRobert K KatzschmannPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
The next robotics frontier will be led by biohybrids. Capable biohybrid robots require microfluidics to sustain, improve, and scale the architectural complexity of their core ingredient: biological tissues. Advances in microfluidics have already revolutionized disease modeling and drug development, and are positioned to impact regenerative medicine but have yet to apply to biohybrids. Fusing microfluidics with living materials will improve tissue perfusion and maturation, and enable precise patterning of sensing, processing, and control elements. This perspective suggests future developments in advanced biohybrids.
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