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FEATURE Medical


Feature sponsored by


Micromotors in medical, marine and space research


Stewart Goulding, Managing Director of precision drive system supplier, EMS, explores how and where advanced micromotor technology is facilitating investigation and experimentation projects


A


utomation has made signifi cant waves in laboratories. Previously, testing samples was a tedious process, fi lled with


manual mixing, transporting and handling of samples. Now, motorised equipment takes on many of the simpler laboratory tasks, allowing staff to have more time to focus on innovation.


For instance, a motorised conveyer belt can transport samples around the laboratory to its designated station. There a robot can pick up the sample and scan its barcode using an onboard camera to identify it and decipher what type of analysis is required. Using its motorised arm, the robot then places the sample into the appropriate piece of laboratory equipment, such as a centrifuge or a spectrophotometer. Motors are also found in these pieces of equipment, helping to power the spinning force in centrifuges, and positioning the sample mounts in spectrophotometers.


Laboratory automation can aid medical


research, such as in the analysis of samples from patients in a clinical trial, and also speed up drug discovery by enabling high throughput screening of potential new medicines against a compound library.


Taking the plunge


Automated equipment is also plunging into the depths of oceans to deliver important information to scientists. Seismometers are instruments that


measure and record details of earthquakes, such as force and duration. The data recorded can be used to locate and characterise earthquakes and to study Earth’s internal structure. Ocean fl oor seismometers operate several kilometres below the surface, therefore making cables unpractical. Instead, they are battery powered and placed on the fl oor for their operating duration, then retrieved to take back to the laboratory for analysis. In order for the sensors to accurately


record the seismic data, it’s important that the seismometer is completely level


50 July/August 2022 | Automation


once placed on the ocean fl oor. As part of the levelling process, accelerometers determine the degree of tilt, which is then communicated to the microprocessor. The microprocessor then uses those values and a levelling algorithm to calculate the motor motions needed to correct the tilt. Following instruction from the microprocessor, the micromotors adjust the seismometer’s position to become level in a matter of minutes. With the seismometer now level, the sensors can accurately collect valuable data that geophysicists can use to monitor earthquakes.


Shoot for the stars There are also many projects where micromotors are travelling hundreds of millions of kilometres away from the ground, as part of explorative space missions. Rovers allow us to explore planets and other celestial bodies without sending humans into space. After landing on a surface, the rover can travel across it while taking photos and collecting samples. A rover can have up to 20 cameras


onboard, which can be used for navigating during landing and traversing the surface, and for sending images back to scientists on Earth for study. The pan and tilt functions of the cameras, along with the lens fi lters, are controlled by micromotors, and allow


panoramic photographs to be taken. Along with capturing images of the study environment, rovers are tasked with collecting rock samples. Here, micromotors power the drills that excavate the rock and the robotic arms that place the samples in a safe chamber. Once transported back to a laboratory on Earth, the rock pieces can be used to discover the biological and geological history of the body.


Meeting high requirements Precision is vital in scientifi c research to achieve accurate and reliable results. Therefore, it’s important to build automated equipment using dependable and high- quality components.


EMS is the sole UK supplier of Faulhaber motors, which are all made in a fi nely- controlled manufacturing process that ensures they perform with reliability and repeatability. They also deliver high power in a small space envelope, helping to keep research equipment compact, which is benefi cial when trying to fi t between other laboratory equipment or transporting into space, for example.


CONTACT:


EMS www.ems-limited.co.uk


automationmagazine.co.uk


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