When we tie our shoelaces or open a bottle of soda, we do it on autopilot, reflexively. Meanwhile, millions of people all ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Scientists 3D print muscle tissue in zero gravity to study diseases beyond Earth
ETH Zurich scientists 3D print muscle tissue in simulated zero gravity, paving the way for growing human tissue in space.
One day, robots might navigate through your blood vessels to break up clots, deliver targeted chemotherapy or repair ruptured blood vessels more efficiently and effectively than existing tools, ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
World’s smallest 3D bioprinting robot delivers healing gels to damaged vocal cords
Scientists unveil a flexible 2.7 mm bioprinter that lets surgeons reconstruct vocal folds and prevent scarring after throat ...
This year, the University of Texas at Austin published a new approach in 3D printing by utilizing violet and ultraviolet ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results