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    RoboticsVideo

    Watch This Robot 3D Print a Building Out of Spray Foam

    This MIT robot can autonomously build a giant dome

    Evan Ackerman
    Alyssa Pagano
    29 Apr 2017
    Watch This Robot 3D Print a Building Out of Spray Foamplay icon
    Robot 3D Prints a Building Out of Spray Foam
    youtu.be
    type:videosolar powerautonomous systemsindustrial robotsrobotics3d printingmitgreen buildingsrobot construction

    Construction seems like an industry that, were I still living in Silicon Valley, I would be tempted to call “ripe for disruption.” Researchers at the MIT Media Lab agree, pointing out in a paper just published in Science Robotics that construction “relies on traditional fabrication technologies that are dangerous, slow, and energy-intensive.” Hey, sounds like a job for some robots, right?

    The Media Lab’s paper introduces the Digital Construction Platform (DCP), which is “an automated construction system capable of customized on-site fabrication of architectural-scale structures.” In other words, it’s a robot arm that uses additive construction techniques to build large structures safely, quickly, and even (in some cases) renewably.

    MIT Media Lab’s Digital Construction Platform (DCP) is mobile (with a top speed of 0.5 m/s) and self contained. It’s battery powered (with a few solar panels on it and an option for more to be attached), so it can potentially run forever, or as long as you have sun. Otherwise, the DCP mimics much of the functionality of a 3D building printer: It has a long reach, giving it a maximum printable volume of 2,786 cubic meters. The robot itself is made out of two arms, modeled loosely on a human: There’s a big long arm with 4 degrees of freedom (DoF) that does all the gross motions, and one small, dexterous 6-DoF Kuka arm that takes care of fine motions like our hands and fingers would. Put it all together, and the total system cost comes to US $244,500, which is really not that bad.

    The construction technique that the DCP uses is straightforward: There’s a sprayer at the end of the small arm that combines two chemicals into a liquid polyurethane foam that rapidly expands and hardens. You can program the DCP to print anything you like, but in the demo in the video above it’s whipping up a 14.6-meter-wide, 3.7-meter-tall hemispherical open dome at a rate of 1.728 cubic meters per hour, printing layer on top of layer. Rather than build the entire structure out of foam, the DCP is actually creating a concrete formwork: Two foam walls, one nested inside the other, with a space in the middle that you can pour concrete into to make a more permanent and resilient structure (or backfill it with dirt or anything else in a pinch), after dropping in plumbing and electrical and stuff. Leaving the foam in place after you do this just adds to the insulation of the resulting building.

    Read more: Robotic Construction Platform Creates Large Buildings on Demand

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    RoboticsHumanoid RobotsVideo

    Unitree Demos New $16k Robot

    Unitree's G1 robot is one of the cheapest—if not the cheapest—humanoid around

    IEEE Spectrum

    IEEE Spectrum is an award-winning technology magazine and the flagship publication of the IEEE, the world’s largest professional organization devoted to engineering and the applied sciences.

    30 Aug 2024
    Unitree Demos New $16k Robotplay icon

    IEEE Spectrum

    humanoid robotsunitreerobotics

    At ICRA 2024, Spectrum editor Evan Ackerman sat down with Unitree founder and CEO Xingxing Wang and Tony Yang, VP of Business Development, to talk about the company’s newest humanoid, the G1 model.

    Smaller, more flexible, and elegant, the G1 robot is designed for general use in service and industry, and is one of the cheapest—if not the cheapest—of a new wave of advanced AI humanoid robots.

    DIYVideo

    DIY: Classic 555 Timer Kit

    Follow along as we build and test one of our favorite kits of all time, the Discrete 555 Timer

    Stephen Cass

    Stephen Cass is the special projects editor at IEEE Spectrum. He currently helms Spectrum's Hands On column, and is also responsible for interactive projects such as the Top Programming Languages app. He has a bachelor's degree in experimental physics from Trinity College Dublin.

    23 Jul 2024
    DIY: Classic 555 Timer Kitplay icon

    IEEE Spectrum

    555hands onintegrated circuitstimerelectronics kitschip design

    Follow along as we build and test one of our favorite kits of all time, the Discrete 555 Timer! Build a huge version of one of the most iconic and surprisingly versatile integrated circuits of all time from transistor and resistors.

    The 555 chip has been used at one time or another by nearly every E.E. alive, and you can use it to detect pulses, make lights blink, debounce inputs, trigger alarms, and even make music (terrible music, but music nonetheless!). We first wrote up the kit in our Hands On column in Spectrum, and this is second version, which features some improvements over the original.

    Keep Reading ↓Show less
    RoboticsSpecial ReportsVideoEast Africa’s Big Bet On Drones

    360 Video: Zoom Over Zanzibar With Tanzania’s Drone Startups

    Come along for the ride as drones soar over the farms and schools of Tanzania

    Evan Ackerman

    Evan Ackerman is a senior editor at IEEE Spectrum. Since 2007, he has written over 6,000 articles on robotics and technology. He has a degree in Martian geology and is excellent at playing bagpipes.

    Michael Koziol

    Michael Koziol is the news manager at IEEE Spectrum. Previously, he was an associate editor covering telecommunications. He graduated from Seattle University with bachelor's degrees in English and Physics, and earned his master's degree in science journalism from New York University.

    Eliza Strickland

    Eliza Strickland is a senior editor at IEEE Spectrum, where she covers AI, biomedical engineering, and other topics. She holds a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University.

    09 May 2019
    6:56
    360 Video: Zoom Over Zanzibar With Tanzania’s Drone Startupsplay icon
    Photo: IEEE Spectrum
    type:videodronestanzaniaeast africa dronesgadgetsafricamappingdelivery drones360 video

    With 360-degree video, IEEE Spectrum puts you aboard drones that are flying high above the Tanzanian landscape: You’ll ride along as drones soar above farms, towns, and the blue expanse of Lake Victoria. You’ll also meet the local entrepreneurs who are creating a new industry, finding applications for their drones in land surveying and delivery. And you’ll get a close-up view from a bamboo grove as a drone pilot named Bornlove builds a flying machine from bamboo and other materials.

    You can follow the action in a 360-degree video in three ways: 1) Watch on your computer, using your mouse to click and drag on the video; 2) watch on your phone, moving the phone around to change your view; or 3) watch on a VR headset for the full immersive experience.

    Keep Reading ↓Show less
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