Publication | Open Access
State of the art of medical devices featuring smart electro-rheological and magneto-rheological fluids
52
Citations
44
References
2017
Year
Medical ElectronicsEngineeringMechanical EngineeringClinical EngineeringHaptic TechnologyMechanics In MedicineBiomedical EngineeringBraille ReadersArtificial OrganRheological MeasurementRheologyMagneto-rheological FluidsRehabilitation EngineeringMicrofluidicsRobot SurgeryBiomimetic ActuatorRheology ControlImplantable DeviceBioinstrumentationBioelectronicsMedical DevicesSmart Fluids
Smart fluids have attracted growing interest across engineering fields, including automotive and medical applications. This review examines electro‑rheological and magneto‑rheological fluids for medical applications. The review details the attributes, operating principles, and practical feasibility of ER/MR‑fluid devices such as robotic‑surgery haptic masters, braille touch panels, tissue‑sensing tactile sensors, prosthetic legs, and dental‑implant haptic interfaces.
Recently, smart fluids have drawn significant attention and growing a great interest in a broad range of engineering applications such as automotive and medical areas. In this article, two smart fluids called electro-rheological (ER) fluid and magneto-rheological (MR) fluid are reviewed in terms of medical applications. Especially, this article describes the attributes and inherent properties of individual medical and rehabilitation devices. The devices surveyed in this article include multi-degree-of-freedom haptic masters for robot surgery, thin membrane touch panels for braille readers, sponge-like tactile sensors to feel human tissues such as liver, rehabilitation systems such as prosthetic leg, and haptic interfaces for dental implant surgery. The operating principle, inherent characteristics and practical feasibility of each medical device or system are fully discussed in details.
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