SINGAPORE – Cyborg cockroaches manoeuvre through tiny spaces under rubble during search-and-rescue missions. Now, they may be used to search flooded or partially submerged spaces.
A flexible “diving suit”, developed by scientists from Nanyang Technological University (NTU) and Japan’s Wakeda University, enables the insects to survive and move underwater, as well as in low-oxygen environments, for up to three hours.
Equipped with infrared cameras, sensors and electrodes, cyborg cockroaches can help to locate survivors in disaster-hit areas.
In March 2025, 10 such cockroaches were sent to assist with search-and-rescue efforts in Myanmar following a 7.7-magnitude earthquake that left more than 3,000 dead.
However, the use of these roaches is limited as the insects, which still rely on their natural respiratory system, are unable to take in oxygen when submerged.
To get around this, researchers developed a tiny suit comprising an oxygen-generation tank, a flexible shell and four silicone oxygen-supply tubes.
Diluted hydrogen peroxide is injected into the 3D-printed tank, which contains a sponge coated with manganese dioxide.
The resulting reaction between the hydrogen peroxide and the manganese dioxide releases oxygen, which is channelled through the flexible shell and silicone tubes to the cockroach’s spiracles – tiny openings on an insect’s body that connect to its respiratory system – allowing it to breathe underwater.
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