Home » today » Technology » Viscous magnetic robot created in Hong Kong could be used in medicine – Observer

Viscous magnetic robot created in Hong Kong could be used in medicine – Observer

You have free access to all the articles of the Observer for being our subscriber.

It could be an April 1st joke, but it’s not.

A group of scientists from the Chinese University of Hong Kong developed a magnetic viscous substance which may, in the future, be used for medical applications, such as removal of objects external to the body from the digestive system. In addition, the magnetic particles that make up the substance give it the characteristic of being a good electrical conductor.

A investigation has been published on March 25 in the scientific journal Advanced Functional Materials. Li Zhang, a professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and co-author of the research, explained to The Guardian that “the ultimate goal is to use it as a robot“, but that, for the time being, it was necessary to improve the substance’s capacity for autonomy.

Still, we consider it fundamental research, the attempt to understand the properties of its components”, clarified the teacherwho said that the substance has “elastic properties,” meaning that it “sometimes behaves like a solid, and other times it behaves like a liquid.”

although still there are no concrete plans for medical testing with the new substance, the team of scientists believes that it can be used, for example, to protect the human organism if a battery or battery is swallowed, since the viscous substance can be used to prevent “toxic electrolytes from leaking” into the body, using the viscous robot as a kind of capsule.

PUB • CONTINUE READING BELOW


The substance itself, however, had to have its particles coated with silica, as the robot’s magnetic particles are themselves toxic to the human body.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.