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Search results for bioinspired materials

Analytical Chemistry Jun 14, 2016

Researchers improve biosensors to detect E. coli

Washington State University researchers have developed a portable biosensor that makes it easier to detect harmful bacteria.

Materials Science Jun 13, 2016

How we are matching – or exceeding – nature's ability to make strong, tough lightweight structural materials

In nature, wood, shells, and other structural materials are lightweight, strong, and tough. Significantly, these materials are made at the ambient temperature in the local environment – not at the high temperatures at which ...

Robotics Jun 7, 2016

Flight of the RoboBee

Increasingly, researchers are designing robots with forms and functions that defy our expectation of what a machine can be or do.

Engineering Jun 1, 2016

Actuators inspired by muscle

To make robots more cooperative and have them perform tasks in close proximity to humans, they must be softer and safer. A new actuator developed by a team led by George Whitesides, Ph.D. - who is a Core Faculty member at ...

Engineering May 26, 2016

Researchers look to bones and shells as blueprints for stronger, more durable concrete

Researchers at MIT are seeking to redesign concrete—the most widely used human-made material in the world—by following nature's blueprints.

Optics & Photonics Apr 15, 2016

Fish-eyed lens cuts through the dark

Combining the best features of a lobster and an African fish, University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers have created an artificial eye that can see in the dark. And their fishy false eyes could help search-and-rescue robots ...

Engineering Apr 4, 2016

Ski design inspired by turtle scales

These alpine skis change stiffness in response to the skier's position. EPFL researchers helped develop the new skis thanks to a mechanism that mimics turtle scales.

Engineering Mar 14, 2016

Fish and insects guide design for future contact lenses

Making the most of the low light in the muddy rivers where it swims, the elephant nose fish survives by being able to spot predators amongst the muck with a uniquely shaped retina, the part of the eye that captures light. ...

Materials Science Feb 24, 2016

Inspired by a desert beetle, cactus and pitcher plant, researchers design a new material to collect water droplets

Organisms such as cacti and desert beetles can survive in arid environments because they've evolved mechanisms to collect water from thin air. The Namib desert beetle, for example, collects water droplets on the bumps of ...

Engineering Feb 8, 2016

Tiny diatoms boast enormous strength

Diatoms are single-celled algae organisms, around 30 to 100 millionths of a meter in diameter, that are ubiquitous throughout the oceans. These creatures are encased within a hard shell shaped like a wide, flattened cylinder—like ...

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