'Living' robots powered by muscle - Politics Forum.org | PoFo

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#553758
'Living' robots powered by muscle

By Roland Pease
BBC radio science unit


Tiny robots powered by living muscle have been created by scientists at the University of California, Los Angeles.

The devices were formed by "growing" rat cells on microscopic silicon chips, the researchers report in the journal Nature Materials.

Less than a millimetre long, the miniscule robots can move themselves without any external source of power.

The work is a dramatic example of the marriage of biotechnology with the tiny world of nanotechnology.

In nanotechnology, researchers often turn to the natural world for inspiration.

But Professor Carlo Montemagno, of the University of California, Los Angeles, turns to nature not for ideas, but for actual starting materials.

In the past he has made rotary nano-motors out of genetically engineered proteins. Now he has grown muscle tissue onto tiny robotic skeletons.

Living device

Montemano's team used rat heart cells to create a tiny device that moves on its own when the cells contract. A second device looks like a minute pair of frog legs.

"The bones that we're using are either a plastic or they're silicon based," he said. "So we make these really fine structures that mechanically have hinges that allow them to move and bend.

"And then by nano-scale manipulation of the surface chemistry, the muscle cells get the cues to say, 'Oh! I want to attach at this point and not to attach at another point'. And so the cells assemble, then they undergo a change, so that they actually form a muscle.

"Now you have a device that has a skeleton and muscles on it to allow it to move."

Under a microscope, you can see the tiny, two-footed "bio-bots" crawl around.

Professor Montemagno says muscles like these could be used in a host of microscopic devices - even to drive miniature electrical generators to power computer chips.

But when biological cells become attached to silicon - are they alive?

"They're absolutely alive," Professor Montemagno told BBC News. "I mean the cells actually grow, multiply and assemble - they form the structure themselves. So the device is alive."

The notion is likely to disturb many who already have concerns about nanotechnology.

But for Carlo Montemagno, a professor of engineering, it makes sense to match the solutions that nature has already found through billions of years of evolution to the newest challenges in technology.


:borg:

Crazy...
User avatar
By Unperson-S
#554464
This is really weird. But, can it actually think, or does it just have spasm's?
User avatar
By Iain
#554470
I don't see anything to suggest it can think.

Life is very overrated, I think. It's just the name we give to a certain, ill-defined, set of properties. There's nothing very special about being alive : just ask the billions of bacteria that coat nearly every surface of your body, inside and out, and every surface you come into contact with.
By bradley
#554784
fascinating stuff

how long before the Ethics Brigade (gah, since Tim and co can decry the evil manoeuvring of the OC Brigade, I can personnify an 'evil' too) gets tot his as well :D

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