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Robotic assembly of the smallest house in the world

the handling and assembly capabilities of nanocomponents of the "μRobotex" platform make the buzz on the net and in the international press through the origami manufacturing of a micro-house at the end of an optical fiber whose dimensions are less than the diameter of a hair.

The "nanorobotics" team of FEMTO-ST institute has in fact developed a new microrobotics system that pushes forward the frontiers of optical nanotechnologies. Combining several existing technologies, the μRobotex platform builds microstructures in a large vacuum chamber and attaches components to optical fiber tips with nanoscale precision.

The construction of the micro-home (size: 20 * 10 * 15μm), reported in the "Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology A", shows how researchers can advance optical detection technologies when handling ion guns , electron beams and finely controlled robotic piloting.

Until now, lab-on fiber technologies did not have robot actuators for nano-assembly, which prevented engineers from building microstructures. This innovation makes possible to install miniaturized sensing elements on fiber tips so that engineers can see and manipulate different components.

With this advance, optical fibers as thin as human hair can be inserted into inaccessible places like jet engines and blood vessels to detect radiation levels or viral molecules.

By using this platform called "μrobotex"almost unique in the world, FEMTO-ST engineers are now building functionalized microstructures to detect specified molecules by attaching their microstructures to optical fibers.

The "nanorobotics" team hopes to push the frontiers of technology even further, by building smaller structures and fixing them on carbon nanotubes of only 20 nanometers to 100 nanometers in diameter.

Many media have highlighted this feat, which also received a tweet of congratulations from Frédérique Vidal, The French Minister of Higher Education and Research.

  • Elsevier article award at BFAS 2024

    Artificial intelligence applied to the electroerosion machining process : Loïc Guiziou1, Emmanuel Ramasso1, Sébastien Thibaud1 et Sébastien Denneulin2 won second prize for best paper at the 8th International Conference on Belief Functions.

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  • Tribute to our colleague Sarah Benchabane

    The CNRS and the university community of Bourgogne Franche-Comté are in mourning following the death of Sarah Benchabane, Director of Research at the CNRS and internationally renowned researcher in phononics, affiliated to the FEMTO-ST laboratory.

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  • Does the i-motif structure of DNA exist in the cell?

    As part of an interdisciplinary project involving FEMTO-ST, a new scientific study is reopening the debate on the very existence of these structures in DNA and their potential therapeutic interest in cell biology for the treatment of certain cancers.

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  • Lancement du projet européen FEDER régionalisé BioIMP

    Une alliance des experts de la santé et des microtechniques pour optimiser la fabrication des biomédicaments.

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  • Pink October: A smart bra project

    Zeina Al Masry talks to France 3 TV about her innovative connected bra project for the early detection of breast cancer.

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  • Vincent Giordano,winner of the EFTF Award 2024

    This award recognises a career spanning more than 35 years of research into frequency metrology, including the development of sapphire oscillators.

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  • Electronique moléculaire : un nouveau regard sur l’organisation des molécules ioniques

    Des scientifiques de l’Institut de chimie de Strasbourg et de FEMTO-ST ont développé une méthode innovante permettant d’améliorer la caractérisation des interfaces ioniques à l’échelle nanométrique, et ainsi d’analyser de nouveaux matériaux pressentis pour s’insérer dans la prochaine génération d

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  • Ondes de spin optiques, un nouvel état de la lumière

    Les états magnétiques présents dans la matière sont une source d’inspiration pour imaginer de nouveaux états de la lumière. Une équipe de l’institut FEMTO-ST a conçu puis créé un équivalent optique des ondes dites « de spin » se propageant dans les aimants.

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  • FEMTO-ST celebrates its 20th anniversary

    Surrounded by its co-supervisors and partners, the FEMTO-ST institute celebrated its 20th anniversary on Wednesday 26 June in Besançon.

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  • Eric MAZUR (Harvard Université) en conférence à FEMTO-ST

    Professeur à l'Université de Harvard, ce scientifique de renommée internationale dans le domaine des  interactions ultrarapides entre la lumière et la matière et la science des matériaux  est intervenu dans nos locaux ce vendredi 21 Juin.

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