Capillary Machines for Manipulating Small Objects
POSTER
Abstract
Machines that can operate on small objects in a programmable, scalable, and simple way are an attractive solution to many problems. To make such machines, we take advantage of the repulsive capillary interactions between millimeter-scale polymer ``floats'' pinned at an interface and the wetting walls of a decimeter-scale 3D-printed device. In this talk, we discuss the experimental techniques necessary to use these repulsive interactions in conjunction with the vertical motion of the device to guide objects along complex 3D paths. These techniques include defining serializable operations to programmably manipulate floats and using device geometry and contact angle hysteresis to simplify complicated motions. We then apply these techniques to the problems of twisting and braiding micrometer-scale wires, which are difficult to manipulate with typical braiding machines.
Authors
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Ahmed Sherif
Harvard University
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J. Miles Faaborg
Harvard University
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Cheng Zeng
Harvard University
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Ming Xiao
Harvard University
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Martin Falk
University of Chicago
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Rozhin Hajian
Harvard University
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Yohai Bar-Sinai
Google Research
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Michael P. Brenner
Harvard University and Google Research, Harvard University, Harvard University - School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
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Vinothan Manoharan
Harvard University