MIT Invents a Swarm of Sea-Skimming, Oil-Collecting Robots

Seaswarm Fleet MIT Swarms of autonomous, solar-powered towel-bots, based on a nanowire mesh, could help those oil-eating microbes clean up the Gulf of Mexico. The "Seaswarm" robot moves like a tank in water, using a conveyor belt to roll over the ocean's surface. The belt is made of an ultra-light nanowire mesh, patented at MIT, that can absorb up to 20 times its weight in oil. Its hydrophobic properties deflect water while sucking up various forms of pollution. The nanowire's inventors have compared it to a paper towel for oil spills. The belt attaches to a yellow "head" covered in photovoltaic panels, according to its designers, based at MIT's Senseable City Lab. As the robot moves head-first through the water, the conveyor belt sucks up oil, which is squeezed out into the head. As the clean part of the belt emerges from the head, the process starts over. Seaswarm robots are intended to work as a fleet, hence the name. The robots would communicate via GPS and WiFi networks to coordinate clean-up, and

MIT Invents a Swarm of Sea-Skimming, Oil-Collecting Robots

Earlier this week, DISCOVER brought you oil-cleaning bacteria. Today, we ...

Fri 27 Aug 10 from Discover Magazine

Seaswarm: MIT unveils robots capable of cleaning up oil spills (w/ Video)

The Deepwater Horizon debacle has once again illustrated the difficulties we face when it comes to mopping oil spills. However, MIT thinks that it has found an answer to the problem: Tiny robots ...

Thu 26 Aug 10 from PhysOrg

MIT robot 'swarm' cleans up oil spills

MIT has developed an autonomous floating robot that it says can absorb as much as 20 times its own weight in oil. read more

Tue 31 Aug 10 from TG Daily

MIT's Solar-Powered Robot Prototype Ready To Swarm Upon Oil Spills

MIT researchers tested the first prototype of the Seaswarm, a pack of robots that use nanotechnology to suck up oil from the surface of the ocean and for immediate processing. When completed, ...

Thu 26 Aug 10 from TechCrunch

MIT to Debut Oil-Slick Absorbing Robot

Researchers at MIT have created a fleet of robots that can cruise the ocean and clean up surface oil slicks.

Wed 25 Aug 10 from Livescience

Autonomous Swarming Robots Can Skim Sea Surface, Collecting Oil As A Team

Seaswarm Fleet MIT Swarms of autonomous, solar-powered towel-bots, based on a nanowire mesh, could help those oil-eating microbes clean up the Gulf of Mexico. The "Seaswarm" robot moves like ...

Wed 25 Aug 10 from Popular Science

Oil-collecting robot may reduce cost of future spills

Researchers at MIT have created a prototype robotic system that could autonomously navigate the surface of the ocean, collecting and processing any oil that it encounters.

Thu 26 Aug 10 from The Engineer

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