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An Adaptive Control Method for Ros-Drill Cellular Microinjector with Low-Resolution Encoder

DOI: 10.1155/2013/418068

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Abstract:

A novel control methodology which uses a low-resolution encoder is presented for a cellular microinjection technology called the Ros-Drill (rotationally oscillating drill). It is developed primarily for ICSI (intracytoplasmic sperm injection) operations, with the objective of generating a desired oscillatory motion at the tip of a micro glass pipette. It is an inexpensive setup, which creates high-frequency (higher than 500?Hz) and small-amplitude (around 0.2 deg) rotational oscillations at the tip of an injection pipette. These rotational oscillations enable the pipette to drill into cell membranes with minimum biological damage. Such a motion control procedure presents no particular difficulty when it uses sufficiently precise motion sensors. However, size, costs, and accessibility of technology to the hardware components severely constrain the sensory capabilities. Consequently, the control mission and the trajectory tracking are adversely affected. This paper presents two contributions: (a) a dedicated novel adaptive feedback control method to achieve a satisfactory trajectory tracking capability. We demonstrate via experiments that the tracking of the harmonic rotational motion is achieved with desirable fidelity; (b) some important analytical features and related observations associated with the controlled harmonic motion which is created by the low-resolution feedback control structure. 1. Introduction and Motivation We provide some background on the main task at hand and relevant motivation, before the control methodology is elaborated. ICSI (intracytoplasmic sperm injection) is a broadly utilized technique for artificial fertilization. This procedure is successfully performed in human oocytes as well as other species such as mouse and bovine. First, a holding pipette is used to immobilize an individual oocyte with a slight suction. Then an injection pipette (with outer diameter of about 8?μm), which contains the sperm head to be injected, is forced into the cell. The piercing through the zona layer and the membrane needs to be achieved with minimal biological damage to facilitate rapid healing. A significant amount of research effort has been devoted towards developing microscopic instruments for ICSI from this perspective alone. The most popular procedure at the present is the piezo-assisted ICSI [1]. However, its piercing performance is successful only by using a small mercury droplet in the pipette tip [2, 3]. Without this addition, undesirable lateral oscillations occur at the tip and severely hamper the performance of piercing. Due to high

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