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Mit Engineers

All articles tagged with #mit engineers

"MIT engineers develop biohybrid robotic replica of the heart's right chamber"
science-and-technology2 years ago

"MIT engineers develop biohybrid robotic replica of the heart's right chamber"

MIT engineers have developed a robotic replica of the heart's right ventricle that combines real heart tissue with synthetic, balloon-like artificial muscles. The replica can mimic the beating and blood-pumping action of live hearts, allowing scientists to study right ventricle disorders and test devices and therapies aimed at treating those disorders. The model accurately replicates the anatomy and function of the right ventricle, including its intricate valves and structures. It can be tuned to simulate healthy and diseased states, such as pulmonary hypertension and myocardial infarction, and can be used to test cardiac devices, such as mechanical valves. The researchers hope to eventually pair the replica with an artificial model of the left ventricle to create a fully tunable, artificial heart.

Revolutionary Implantable Device: A Needle-Free Solution for Diabetes Control
health2 years ago

Revolutionary Implantable Device: A Needle-Free Solution for Diabetes Control

Engineers at MIT have developed an implantable device that could help people with type 1 diabetes monitor their glucose levels and potentially produce insulin when needed. The device, which has been tested on mice, contains oxygen-producing islet cells and kept glucose levels stable for at least one month. Although concerns about diabetic ketoacidosis and fibrosis remain, researchers hope to create a larger version of the device for human testing within the next four years. If successful, this technology could revolutionize diabetes treatment and potentially be adapted for other illnesses requiring therapeutic protein delivery.

"Kirigami: Ancient Japanese Art Inspires Ultrastrong, Lightweight Engineering Materials"
science-and-technology2 years ago

"Kirigami: Ancient Japanese Art Inspires Ultrastrong, Lightweight Engineering Materials"

MIT engineers have used the ancient Japanese art of kirigami to create high-performance architected materials called plate lattices. By modifying a common origami crease pattern, the researchers were able to fabricate ultralight and ultrastrong structures from metal or other materials with custom shapes and tailored mechanical properties. The kirigami technique allows for the mass production of these structures, making them potentially useful in architectural, airplane, automotive, or aerospace components. The researchers also plan to develop user-friendly CAD design tools for these structures and explore methods to reduce computational costs for simulating desired properties.