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We all know how sensitive human fingertips are - be it feeling a baby's face or handling a hot pan. Now two chemical engineers have come up with a robotic device that can mimic that sensitivity and this could greatly help, giving minimally invasive surgery the touch sensation. Professor Ravi F. Saraf and his doctoral student Vivek Maheshwari at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, have developed a self-assembling nanoparticle device that may tell surgeons whether they have excised a tumor in its entirety. It is a capability beyond that of other mechanical devices available currently.
"The touch resolution of the human finger is 40 microns (40 millionths of a meter)," says Saraf, a professor of chemical engineering. "Using nanoparticles, we can attain resolution close to human touch, which is about 50 times better than what is out there today." |
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