Posted on 03/07/2019 9:42:53 PM PST by LibWhacker
Nanofabbed bots are small enough to be delivered via syringe, raising all sorts of fantastic voyage possibilities. Nick Carne reports.
How do you build a very big army of very small robots? Start with a 10-centimetre silicon wafer.
Thats what engineers from the University of Pennsylvania in the US did to create a million of them in just a few weeks using nanofabrication techniques borrowed from the semiconductor industry.
Each robot is wirelessly powered, able to walk and survive harsh environments, and tiny enough to be injected through an ordinary hypodermic needle, which opens up all manner of possibilities.
"When I was a kid, I remember looking in a microscope and seeing all this crazy stuff going on. Now we're building stuff that's active at that size; we don't just have to watch this world, you can actually play in it, says research leader Marc Miskin.
The smarts are in the robots legs, which are formed from a bilayer of platinum and titanium. When a laser light shines on their solar panels, the platinum expands but the titanium remains rigid, causing the legs to bend.
The robot's gait is generated because each solar cell causes the alternate contraction or relaxing of the front or back legs.
The legs are just 100 atoms thick, but theyre strong. "Each robot carries a body that's 1000 times thicker and weighs roughly 8000 times more than each leg," says Miskin.
The solar panels (two or four per unit) and the electronics control components are etched into a layer of silicon that sits on top of the robots rectangular glass skeleton.
Miskin presented the work to date at this weeks meeting of the American Physical Society in Boston.
Already he and colleagues at Pennsylvania and at Cornell University, also in the US, are working on ever smarter versions of the robots with on-board sensors, clocks and controllers.
In particular, they are looking at new energy sources, including ultrasound and magnetic fields, that would give the robots greater range and ultimately allow them to work in the human body, delivering drugs or mapping the brain.
"We found out you can inject them using a syringe and they survive, Miskin says. They're still intact and functional, which is pretty cool.
sounds like a michael chrichton (sp?) book or movie
Prey
couldn’t remember the name- the book was great-
Would you rather have to fight a hundred horses the size of a duck, or one duck the size of a horse?
“... you can actually play in it,...”
What could go wrong?
‘Swarm’ was Crichton’s book on just this subject. A good read.
Make that ‘Prey’, not Swarm
yeah i just looked it up- it was prey- I liekd the book- got some negative reviews on amazon, but i liked it-
How about the movie where the sub was shrunk and put into the human body (Martin Short, possibly Dennis Quaid, et al).
Well i am sure the first job is to engineer them to assassinate people.
Sounds like the perfect device used in a sci fi fiction of a world that decides it must cull out certain genetic or even ethnic groups of people.
Like killing anyone who isn’t fair haired.
John Ringo actually did write such a novel as that. Amazon banned him i think.
Raquel Welch in a tight wetsuit was the best part of that movie.
The crew survived but the operation was a failure since the remnants of the sub, villain, and whatever else left in him would have reverted shortly after.
Think of all the more people pickles could have eliminate if she had that technology.
'Building' is irrelevant. Delivery is primary. Resistance is futile.
Live Free or Die - John Ringo, first book in the Troy Rising series. It is still on Amazon.
I just wish he would write more in the series...
The original story was written by a friend, Jerome Bixby. He disavowed the movie version because the Producers insisted on having a villain. He didn’t believe one, other than the Human body, itself, was required.
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