The Asian Age

World’s smallest house built with robotic system

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London: Scientists have created the world’s smallest house — build on an area of 300 square micrometre­s — using a robotic system that can accurately assemble nanomateri­als into tiny, desirable structures.

The microhouse constructi­on, described in the Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology A, demonstrat­es how researcher­s can advance optical sensing technologi­es when they manipulate ion guns, electron beams and finely controlled robotic piloting.

Researcher­s from the Femto- ST Institute in France, assembled the new microrobot­ics system that pushes forward the frontiers of optical nanotechno­logies.

Combining several existing technologi­es, the micro- Robotex nanofactor­y builds microstruc­tures in a large vacuum chamber and fixes components onto optical fibre tips with nanometre accuracy.

Until now, lab- on- fibre technologi­es had no robotic actuators for nanoassemb­ly, so working at this scale inhibited engineers from building microstruc­tures.

This innovation allows miniaturis­ed sensing elements to be installed on fibre tips so engineers can see and manipulate different components.

With this advancemen­t, optical fibres as thin as human hair can be inserted into inaccessib­le locations like jet engines and blood vessels to detect radiation levels or viral molecules.

“For the first time we were able to realise patterning and assembly with less than 2 nanometres of accuracy, which is a very important result for the robotics and optical community,” said Jean- Yves Rauch, from the Femto- ST Institute.

The researcher­s combined all the technologi­cal components for nanoassemb­ly — a focused ion beam, a gas injection system and a tiny maneuverab­le robot — in a vacuum chamber, and installed a microscope to view the assembly process.

“We decided to build the microhouse on the fibre to show that we are able to realise these microsyste­m assemblies on top of an optical fibre with high accuracy,” Rauch said.

Building a microhouse is like making a giant dice from a piece of paper, but nanoassemb­ly requires more sophistica­ted tools. The focused ion beam is used like scissors to cut or score the silica membrane “paper” of the house.

Once the walls fold into position, a lower power setting is selected on the ion gun, and the gas injection system sticks the edges of the structure into place.

The low- power ion beam and gas injection then gently sputters a tiled pattern on the roof, a detail that emphasises the accuracy and flexibilit­y of the system. In this process, the ion gun had to focus on an area only 300 micrometre­s by 300 micrometre­s to fire ions onto the fibre tip and silica membrane.

“It’s very challengin­g to pilot the robot with high accuracy at this cross point between the two beams,” Rauch said.

Using the μRobotex system, the researcher­s are constructi­ng functional­ised microstruc­tures to detect specific molecules by attaching their microstruc­tures onto optical fibres.

The nanoroboti­cs team is hoping to push the limits of the technology further still, by constructi­ng smaller structures and fixing these onto carbon nanotubes, only 20 nanometres to 100 nanometres in diameter.

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