Welcome to βnecroprintingββ3D printer nozzle made from mosquitoβs proboscis
Necrobotics is a field of engineering that builds robots out of a mix of synthetic materials and animal body parts. It has produced micro-grippers with pneumatically operated legs taken from dead spiders and walking robots based on deceased cockroaches. βThese necrobotics papers inspired us to build something different,β said Changhong Cao, a mechanical engineering professor at the McGill University in Montreal, Canada.
Caoβs team didnβt go for a robotβinstead, it adapted a female mosquito proboscis to work as a nozzle in a super-precise 3D printer. And it worked surprisingly well.
Fangs and stings
To find the right nozzle for their 3D necroprinting system, Caoβs team began with a broad survey of natural micro-dispensing tips. The researchers examined stingers of bees, wasps, and scorpions; the fangs of venomous snakes; and the claws of centipedes. All of those evolved to deliver a fluid to the target, which is roughly what a 3D printerβs nozzle does. But they all had issues. βSome were too curved and curved for high-precision 3D printing,β Cao explained. βAlso, they were optimized for delivering pulses of venom, not for a steady, continuous flow, which is what you need for printing.β


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