Professor Metin Sitti
The PhysOrg article Robot walks on water said
Water striders, insects that walk on the surface of the water, may never set foot on land in their lives, and yet they’re not swimmers. Over the past million or so years, this insect — sometimes called a water skater — has optimized its use of surface tension to balance its 0.01-gram body on lakes, ponds, and even oceans.
Researchers Yun Seong Song, a PhD student in mechanical engineering, and Metin Sitti, assistant professor in mechanical engineering, both from Carnegie Mellon University, have recently built a robot that mimics the water strider’s natural abilities. The first water striding robot, with an appearance and design closely resembling its insect counterpart, doesn’t ever break the surface tension of the water, and is highly maneuverable.
Song and Sitti’s small robot is different from other floating robots in that its small mass and long legs enable it to utilize the surface tension force to stay afloat. In contrast, macroscale bodies must rely on buoyancy, which is based on their large volumes. The researchers predict that such a robot might be used for environmental monitoring via wireless communication, as well as for educational and entertainment purposes.
Metin Sitti, Ph.D. is Assistant Professor, Department of
Mechanical Engineering and Robotics Institute
and Director, NanoRobotics Lab,
Carnegie Mellon
University.
He is Chair, IEEE Nanotechnology Council,
Nanorobotics and
Nanomanufacturing Technical Committee, Chair, IEEE Robotics and
Automation Society, Rapid Prototyping in Robotics and Automation
Technical Committee, and
Associate Editor,
IEEE Transactions on Robotics.
Micro- and nanoscale robotic systems constitute Metin’s main research
and
educational activities. In his NanoRobotics Lab, his major
micro/nanorobotics research
thrust area is the miniaturization of robots with a variety of
locomotion
and manipulation capabilities at the small scale. One of his ultimate
goals is to scale down some of these robots to sub-millimeter overall
sizes. Unique characteristics of these miniature robots are: direct
accessibility to smaller spaces and scales; new physics and mechanisms;
smaller, faster, light weight, and inexpensive device; massively
parallel, large numbers, and distributed operation; and multi
length-scale system integration (macro/micro/nano).
His main research objectives for these robots are: to introduce a system
level mechatronic design methodology including new micro/nanoscale
physics, mechanisms, actuators, power sources, and control; to develop
new micro/nanoscale manipulation, manufacturing and control methods; to
propose alternative methods for powering miniature robots; and to
demonstrate unique applications for these robots with a positive impact
on our society.
His approach to realize these above objectives firstly involves
developing a biologically inspired miniature robot design methodology.
Being inspired by lizards, insects and bacteria, new miniature climbing,
crawling, swimming, and water walking robots are proposed. Adapting the
just good-enough and efficient solutions of nature at the small scale to
miniature robots, repeatable adhesives, new principles of locomotion,
and efficient and agile motion mechanisms are introduced. Using these
biomimetic robots, many unknown design, locomotion, and material
properties of these biological systems are also discovered, leading to
scientific contributions.
As a second approach, high volume new micro/nanoscale manufacturing and
rapid prototyping methods such as laser micro-machining,
micro/nanomolding, and parallel micro/nanoassembly methods have been
proposed. Using these manufacturing techniques, the aim is to mass-produce
miniature robots to have tens or hundreds of them for mobile
sensor networks and swarm robotic applications in the future. Currently,
only mass-production of gecko inspired polymer microfiber adhesives in
wafer scale has been demonstrated. As precision micro/nanoscale
manipulation and assembly methods, Atomic force microscope (AFM) probes
are used to manipulate micro/nanoentities such as particles, carbon
nanotubes, and polymer fibers.
Metin authored
Nanotribological Characterization System by AFM Based Controlled
Pushing,
Survey of Nanomanipulation Systems, and
PZT Actuated Four-Bar Mechanism with Two Flexible Links for
Micromechanical Flying Insect Thorax,
and coauthored
Evidence for Van Der Waals Adhesion in Gecko Setae,
Two-Dimensional Fine Particle Positioning
Under Optical Microscope Using a Piezoresistive
Cantilever as a Manipulator,
Teleoperated Nano Scale Object Manipulation,
Wing Transmission for a Micromechanical Flying Insect, and
Tele-Touch Feedback of Elastically Deformable Surfaces at the
Micro/Nano
Scale: Modeling and Experiments.
He holds patent
Adhesive microstructure and method of forming same.
Metin earned his B.Sc. in Electrical and Electronics Engineering and
Physics (double major) in 1992 from Bogaziçi University, Istanbul,
Turkey. He earned his M.Sc. in Electrical and Electronics Engineering
in 1994 from Bogaziçi University, Istanbul, Turkey. His M.Sc.
thesis
was
“Visual Tracking: An Integration of Control and Vision”.
He earned his Ph.D. in
Electrical Engineering at the University of Tokyo, Institute of Industrial
Science, Intelligent Mechatronics Laboratory, Tokyo, Japan in
1999. His Ph.D. thesis was
Teleoperated 2-D Micro/Nanomanipulation Using Atomic Force
Microscope.
Listen to his interview on Talking
Robots. Read his
LinkedIn profile.