Interesting Engineering on MSN
Magnetic ‘muscles’ turn origami into crawling robots that move and heal from within
Once inside, a magnetic field guides and unfolds it at the target site, where it releases medicine in a controlled and steady ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Paper-thin magnetic muscles bring origami robots to life for medical use
A new 3D printing technique can create paper-thin "magnetic muscles," which can be applied to origami structures to make them ...
University of Washington (UW) scientists have introduced a remarkable advancement in micro-robotics, crafting battery-free, tiny robots inspired by the folding patterns of leaves. University of ...
News Medical on MSN
Origami Robots Revolutionize Medicine Delivery
A new 3-D printing technique can create paper-thin "magnetic muscles," which can be applied to origami structures to make them move.By infusing ...
Researchers at North Carolina State University have created paper-thin “magnetic muscles” that can power origami structures. The technology uses magnetic films to generate controlled movement for ...
NC State researchers create 3D-printed magnetic origami robots for precise, targeted drug delivery inside the body.
The next generation of soft robots might be folding and sliding as effortlessly as living tissue, say a team of engineers who ...
University of Washington scientists have built a battery-free flying robot that stabilizes its descent by changing shape in mid-air—a design that was inspired by origami, according to a recent paper ...
Cynthia Sung, head of the Sung Robotics Lab within Penn’s GRASP Lab, is especially interested in getting high school students into engineering. Self-folding origami robots, anyone? Cynthia Sung.
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