3D-printed hairs: Ph.D. candidate, professor developing tiny sensors to detect flow and environmental changes

Eyelashes and brows catch dust and debris from entering eyes. The same idea goes for tiny nose and ear hairs.At a more microscopic level, the tiny hair-like cilia that line human cells help detect subtle environmental changes and can boost a person’s senses.

These are the concepts that nanoscience and nanotechnology doctoral candidate Phillip Glass and advisor Daeha Joung, Ph.D., are pursuing with their 3D-printed cilia sensors at the Virginia Commonwealth University Department of Physics in the College of Humanities and Sciences.

The two are exploring the field of mechanosensing, a biological term for the methods the body uses to collect external stimuli and send it to the brain — resulting in senses like touch, hearing, movement and pain. Mechanoreceptors are cells or organs that perform the sensing.Now they’re bringing the human concept to machines and robots.

Read more at VCU News