optical density
A self-driving lab for solution-processed electrochromic thin films
Dahms, Selma, Torresi, Luca, Bandesha, Shahbaz Tareq, Hansmann, Jan, Röhm, Holger, Colsmann, Alexander, Schott, Marco, Friederich, Pascal
Solution-processed electrochromic materials offer high potential for energy-efficient smart windows and displays. Their performance varies with material choice and processing conditions. Electrochromic thin film electrodes require a smooth, defect-free coating for optimal contrast between bleached and colored states. The complexity of optimizing the spin-coated electrochromic thin layer poses challenges for rapid development. This study demonstrates the use of self-driving laboratories to accelerate the development of electrochromic coatings by coupling automation with machine learning. Our system combines automated data acquisition, image processing, spectral analysis, and Bayesian optimization to explore processing parameters efficiently. This approach not only increases throughput but also enables a pointed search for optimal processing parameters. The approach can be applied to various solution-processed materials, highlighting the potential of self-driving labs in enhancing materials discovery and process optimization.
- Europe > Germany > Baden-Württemberg > Karlsruhe Region > Karlsruhe (0.05)
- Europe > Germany > Bavaria > Lower Franconia > Würzburg (0.04)
- North America > United States (0.04)
- Europe > Germany > Baden-Württemberg > Karlsruhe Region > Weinheim (0.04)
- Energy (0.93)
- Materials > Chemicals > Commodity Chemicals > Petrochemicals (0.46)
RoboCulture: A Robotics Platform for Automated Biological Experimentation
Angers, Kevin, Darvish, Kourosh, Yoshikawa, Naruki, Okhovatian, Sargol, Bannerman, Dawn, Yakavets, Ilya, Shkurti, Florian, Aspuru-Guzik, Alán, Radisic, Milica
Automating biological experimentation remains challenging due to the need for millimeter-scale precision, long and multi-step experiments, and the dynamic nature of living systems. Current liquid handlers only partially automate workflows, requiring human intervention for plate loading, tip replacement, and calibration. Industrial solutions offer more automation but are costly and lack the flexibility needed in research settings. Meanwhile, research in autonomous robotics has yet to bridge the gap for long-duration, failure-sensitive biological experiments. We introduce RoboCulture, a cost-effective and flexible platform that uses a general-purpose robotic manipulator to automate key biological tasks. RoboCulture performs liquid handling, interacts with lab equipment, and leverages computer vision for real-time decisions using optical density-based growth monitoring. We demonstrate a fully autonomous 15-hour yeast culture experiment where RoboCulture uses vision and force feedback and a modular behavior tree framework to robustly execute, monitor, and manage experiments. Video demonstrations of RoboCulture can be found at https://ac-rad.github.io/roboculture.
- North America > Canada > Ontario > Toronto (0.14)
- North America > United States (0.04)
- Europe > Spain > Galicia > Madrid (0.04)
- Asia > Japan > Honshū > Kantō > Kanagawa Prefecture > Yokohama (0.04)