Entry Date:
June 13, 2018

Fluid Lattices

Principal Investigator Skylar Tibbits


Fluid Self-Organization is part of a series of investigations by MIT’s Self-Assembly Lab looking at autonomous assembly in complex and uncontrolled environments (water, air, space etc). In this experiment, independent modules are released in a 200 and 500- gallon tank and self-organize into a complete lattice structures based on the interactions of the elements and the pattern of energy in the system. The structures can then be removed, tested, used or disassembled and thrown back into the chamber. We are interested in a future scenario of “Evolutionary Fabrication” whereby materials can self-organize into optimal configurations based on the dynamics of the system. This comes in contrast to today’s fabrication processes (printing, milling, lasercutting etc) where a design is sent to a machine and an output is produced rather than letting the system propose new and potentially better solutions/mutations.