Printed-on-demand robots might be a reality before the end of the decade
if a US-based project achieves its goals. Researchers aim to build a desktop technology that would allow
an average person to design and print a machine within 24 hours. The team says
that making it easier to create specialised robots could have a "profound
impact on society". The effort is being funded by a $10m (£6.3m) grant from the National Science Foundation. The Virginia-based organisation described the move as a
"game changing investment". "It has the potential to democratise
and personalise automation to meet the needs of individual users - whether for
search and rescue workers in remote areas of the world or educators in
classrooms around the US - possibilities for social impact abound," said
spokeswoman Lisa-Joy Zgorski.
Next generation tech
The five-year project
involves robotics experts at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard
University and the University of Pennsylvania. The team members admit it would
be unrealistic to hope to have created a "universal robot-making
machine" within that time limit. However, they intend to have developed a
computer program which would allow users to specify certain characteristics -
such as the ability to navigate an environment or manipulate certain types of
object. This would then create computer manufacturing files which would act as
a recipe for a number of machines to build a robot from scratch with minimal
human interaction. In recent years printers capable of making 3D plastic models
have dropped in price making them available to hobbyists. The research team
hope their work will take the development to another level. "We think of
printing as a broad class of techniques which are inherently accessible and
relatively cheap," Prof Rob Wood from Harvard University told the BBC. "3D
printers are becoming more accessible but we want to go beyond that to create
robots that encompass multiple functionalities, that have electrical and
mechanical components, controllers and microprocessors. That's something that
goes beyond today's state-of-the-art printers."
Democratising robotics
Longer term, Prof Wood
said he hoped the research would pave the way for one-stop-shop machines that
can "spit out" a robot at home or at the future equivalent of a
photocopy store for less than $100 a piece. His colleague Prof Daniela Rus,
from MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, added that
this could lead to the creation of a community of users who would share designs
and experiences. "Building on our philosophy that if you can imagine it
you can build it, we believe this project has enormous potential for broader
impacts in education, manufacturing, healthcare, and everyday life," she
said. "Imagine a world in which printed functional objects are as common
as printed paper. "We will enable the rapid creation of tooling for
manufacturing, and fast reconfiguration of assembly lines. Custom robot hands
will bring a new level of flexibility to people confined to wheelchairs,
allowing them to reach for objects on shelves or floors, and inexpensive
project kits in the classroom. "
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