| Literature DB >> 34552257 |
Bong Hoon Kim1,2, Kan Li3,4, Jin-Tae Kim5, Yoonseok Park5, Hokyung Jang6, Xueju Wang7, Zhaoqian Xie8,9, Sang Min Won10, Hong-Joon Yoon5, Geumbee Lee5, Woo Jin Jang11, Kun Hyuck Lee5, Ted S Chung5, Yei Hwan Jung12, Seung Yun Heo5, Yechan Lee13, Juyun Kim11, Tengfei Cai14, Yeonha Kim11, Poom Prasopsukh14, Yongjoon Yu5, Xinge Yu15, Raudel Avila16,17,18, Haiwen Luan5,16,17,18, Honglie Song19, Feng Zhu20, Ying Zhao21, Lin Chen22, Seung Ho Han23, Jiwoong Kim1,2, Soong Ju Oh24, Heon Lee24, Chi Hwan Lee25,26,27, Yonggang Huang28,29,30, Leonardo P Chamorro31, Yihui Zhang32, John A Rogers33,34,35,36,37,38,39.
Abstract
Large, distributed collections of miniaturized, wireless electronic devices1,2 may form the basis of future systems for environmental monitoring3, population surveillance4, disease management5 and other applications that demand coverage over expansive spatial scales. Aerial schemes to distribute the components for such networks are required, and-inspired by wind-dispersed seeds6-we examined passive structures designed for controlled, unpowered flight across natural environments or city settings. Techniques in mechanically guided assembly of three-dimensional (3D) mesostructures7-9 provide access to miniature, 3D fliers optimized for such purposes, in processes that align with the most sophisticated production techniques for electronic, optoelectronic, microfluidic and microelectromechanical technologies. Here we demonstrate a range of 3D macro-, meso- and microscale fliers produced in this manner, including those that incorporate active electronic and colorimetric payloads. Analytical, computational and experimental studies of the aerodynamics of high-performance structures of this type establish a set of fundamental considerations in bio-inspired design, with a focus on 3D fliers that exhibit controlled rotational kinematics and low terminal velocities. An approach that represents these complex 3D structures as discrete numbers of blades captures the essential physics in simple, analytical scaling forms, validated by computational and experimental results. Battery-free, wireless devices and colorimetric sensors for environmental measurements provide simple examples of a wide spectrum of applications of these unusual concepts.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34552257 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03847-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962