The New York Times Features Marc Miskin’s Micro-Robots Medium.com Archive / May 1, 2019 Share: Author: Evan Lerner The New York Times Features Marc Miskin’s Micro-Robots Miskin’s microscopic robots can be mass-produced on a silicon wafer. Once released, they can be coaxed into moving by laser light. Marc Miskin, assistant professor in the Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering, has engineered micro-robots — each smaller than a computer pixel — that were featured in the New York Times and the Philadelphia Inquirer for their potential to fundamentally change the field of robotics. Miskin’s microscopic robots can be mass-produced on a silicon wafer. Once released, they can be coaxed into moving by laser light. Miskin, who began working on the micro-robots as a post-doctoral researcher at Cornell, presented his impressive research at the American Physical Society’s March Meeting. The micro-robots consist of a silicon wafer with “legs” of platinum and titanium. The robots attain their minuscule dimensions by avoiding the need for a battery; instead, they are solar-powered and controlled by lasers. The New York Times’ Kenneth Chang reported on Miskin’s dust-sized robots, emphasizing the vast potential the devices have for future technologies: “We can take your favorite piece of silicon electronics, put legs on it and then build a million of them,” said Dr. Miskin, a professor of electrical and systems engineering at the University of Pennsylvania. “That’s the vision.” He imagines a wealth of uses for these microbots, which are about the size of a cell. They could crawl into cellphone batteries and clean and rejuvenate them. They might be a boon to neural scientists, burrowing into the brain to measure nerve signals. Millions of them in a petri dish could be used to test ideas in networking and communications. Continue reading “The Microbots Are on Their Way” at the New York Times. Read More Amish Patel Wins Van Ness Award Daeyeon Lee Wins James M. Lee Memorial Award from Korean Institute of Chemical Engineers