Periodic Reporting for period 1 - OMEGA (On the ModElling of micro-robots in the Gut: a non-smooth dynamics Approach)
Berichtszeitraum: 2021-10-01 bis 2023-09-30
Lower gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopies, which examine the colon for detection of premalignant and malignant changes through visualisation of the colonic mucosa, comprise more than 50% of the demand for endoscopies. Despite major advances in image acquisition and processing over recent decades, the basic design and ergonomics of endoscopes have barely changed in more than 40 years. It is less reliable for small pedunculated polyps and for sessile serrated lesions which are not easily visualised. Endoscopy remains challenging for both clinicians and patients. Some GI patients experience significant pain during procedures, which require a team of clinicians to sedate and monitor patients, and to maintain and decontaminate increasingly complex and expensive devices. For clinicians to acquire safely the required expertise and practice, lengthy training periods (2-5 years) and highly developed professional regulatory frameworks are required. Therefore, in GI endoscopic practice, there is an urgent need for new modalities that are safe, painless, accurate and reliable, which requires minimal training for practitioners.
This fellowship seeks to develop a new mathematical tool for analysing the sensing capability of micro-robots to aid the detection of hard-to-visualise bowel lesions. In the long term, this work aims to initiate a new modality for bowel cancer screening, delivering an efficient minimally invasive procedure for patients.
After an in-depth study of the robot-tumour interactions, the findings reveal significant changes in robot's dynamics when the robot encounters different circular folds and tumours. Such a correlation between the dynamical characteristics of the robot and the tumour’s mechanical properties proves the potential of utilising a vibrational capsule robot for early detection of bowel cancer.
Considering the anatomy of small intestine involving lesions, circular folds and tumours are the major sources resisting the locomotion of capsule robot. By mimicking the small-bowel tumours as cone folds, the fellow then carried out a comparative study on the dynamics of the capsule robot in contact with different circular and cone folds. With the aid of GPU parallel computing and path-following techniques, extensive bifurcation and basin stability analyses are performed to identify different capsule-fold interactions and unravel the parametric influences on the robot, such as fold shape, Young’s modulus and robot’s control parameters (e.g. excitation period and amplitude). It was found that fold shape and Young’s modulus may only affect capsule’s dynamics significantly when robot’s excitation period is large. Two essential locomotion modes, a period-one motion with capsule-fold contact in the small region of excitation amplitude and a fold crossing motion in the large region of excitation amplitude, dominating the dynamics of the robot regardless of fold shape and Young’s modulus were observed. In addition, the instability mechanism of this period-one motion was revealed. The numerical study done by the fellow provides a solid basis for the locomotion control of the robot when encountering different types of circular folds and small-bowel tumours. It also offers the potential of utilising robot’s dynamics for bowel cancer detection.
The fellow was also involved in the study of an experimental rig with two-sided constraint and bidirectional drift, which is the prototype of the capsule robot in centimetre scale. The fellow carried out parameter identification for the experimental rig by using the simulated annealing algorithm. The experimental work particularly focused on observing several types of bifurcations which are common in the capsule-tumour contact model. It was found that with a higher excitation frequency and amplitude, the vibro-impact dynamics on both ends of the constraints could result in a large amount of uncertainties, thus bi-stable and chaotic motions are likely to be observed. While being unstable, the system runs with a relatively high energy efficiency in this configuration.