Assembler robots make large structures from little pieces
Systems of tiny robots may someday build high-performance structures, from airplanes to space settlements.
Systems of tiny robots may someday build high-performance structures, from airplanes to space settlements.
Self-assembling materials can form patterns that might be useful in optical devices.
Mobile motor could pave the way for robots to assemble complex structures — including other robots.
Expanding polymer enables self-folding without heating or immersion in water.
“Morphing” wing could enable more efficient plane manufacturing and flight.
Skylar Tibbits creates smart materials that elegantly transform themselves to improve processes and products.
Controlled by magnetic fields, tiny robot climbs inclines, swims, and carries loads twice its weight.
Prototype made almost entirely of printable parts demonstrates crucial capabilities of reconfigurable robots.
New algorithms and electronic components could enable printable robots that self-assemble when heated.
Graduate student Nicolas Aimon develops pulsed laser deposition techniques for mixed multiferroic oxide films.
New techniques for combining complex oxide thin films promise electrical control of magnetic properties for data storage and computing.
New technique allows production of complex microchip structures in one self-assembling step.
MIT researchers produce 3-D configurations that could lead to new microchips and other devices.
By turning a common problem in chip manufacture into an advantage, MIT researchers produce structures only 30 atoms wide.