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Scientists to play soccer with nano robots

This weekend, as part of the 2007 RoboCup in Atlanta, Georgia, a new fleet of bots will debut in the Nanogram Demonstration competition. The nanoscale soccer games are being organized jointly by RoboCup and the U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Institute of Standards and Technology. 
Photograph of a playing field for the nanogram robots.
Photograph of a playing field for the nanogram robots. NIST
/ Source: LiveScience

Soccer fans will need a microscope to keep up with this game: Tiny robots will dribble a “soccer ball” no wider than a human hair on a field that can fit on a grain of rice.

This weekend, as part of the 2007 RoboCup in Atlanta, Georgia, a new fleet of bots will debut in the Nanogram Demonstration competition. The nanoscale soccer games are being organized jointly by RoboCup and the U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Institute of Standards and Technology. 

Five teams are entered in the nano-competition: two teams from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and one each from the U.S. Naval Academy in Maryland, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology and Simon Fraser University in Canada.

The nanoscale robots, shown in this video, will play on a silicon microchip “field” that is laced with electrodes from which the bots can draw power and get electronic instructions. Teams monitor their “players” on a screen hooked up to a microscope.

While the bots measure up to a few hundred micrometers in length, they are considered “nanoscale” because they weigh from a few nanograms to a few hundred nanograms. For comparison, a grain of sand weighs about 300,000 nanograms.

The tiny athletes will compete in three events designed to test their overall agility and ability to manipulate objects, including:

  • The 2-Millimeter Dash — Each nanobot chooses the optimal time for a goal-to-goal sprint across the playing field.
  • Slalom Drill — Robots race from goal to goal while avoiding “defenders” (polymer posts) that block the path.
  • Ball-Handling Drill — Robots “dribble” as many microdisks as possible into a goal within a 3-minute period. 

RoboCup is an annual international competition designed to foster innovations in intelligent robotics. NIST hopes the nano-soccer competition will provide scientists with information about the feasibility of tiny computer technologies.