Biohybrid Robots with Embedded Conductive Fibers for Actuation, Sensing, and Closed-loop Control
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Living organisms achieve adaptive actuation through the seamless integration of neural motor control circuitry and proprioceptive feedback. While biohybrid robotics aims to replicate these capabilities by merging engineered muscle with synthetic scaffolds, the field remains limited by interfaces that lack the efficiency and closed-loop regulation of natural neuromuscular systems. Here, we introduce a biohybrid muscle actuator system featuring a bioelectronic interface based on soft poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) fibers for stimulation and sensing. These fibers conformally couple to muscle tissues, eliciting robust contractions at voltages as low as 1 V—requiring ultra-low power (0.376 ± 0.034 mW) and preserving long-term tissue viability. By leveraging the independent addressability of these fibers, we demonstrate selective actuation of individual muscle units to achieve precise spatiotemporal control of a two-muscle-powered walking biohybrid robot, reaching a locomotion speed of 5.43 ± 0.79 mm/min. When configured as strain sensors, the fibers exhibit a high gauge factor of 155.45 ± 6.59 and resolve contractile displacements within tens of micrometers. We demonstrate that this sensing modality can be integrated into a closed-loop controller to autonomously modulate stimulation based on real-time feedback, significantly mitigating muscle fatigue (p = 0.038) during continuous operation. This work establishes a versatile platform for efficient actuation and intrinsic feedback sensing, providing a blueprint for efficient, autonomous, and adaptive biohybrid machines.
Summary
Soft conductive fibers enable a bioelectronic interface for low-power actuation and closed-loop control in biohybrid robots.