Patents by Inventor Neil A. Gershenfeld

Neil A. Gershenfeld has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 12124784
    Abstract: A method of producing inductive sensors, including LVDTs and inductive encoders, manufactured by plotting fine wire onto a planar substrate. A sensor is constructed using a computer-controlled machine to place wire onto a planar adhesive substrate. This substrate forms a predictable and uniform surface to deposit each turn of wire, and so the placement accuracy is considerably better than conventional coil winding. This planar substrate can then be manipulated into a desired three-dimensional shape (e.g., by folding, rolling, corrugating, winding, etc.), carrying the wire along with it. In particular, the same CNC machine used to place the wire can be used to cut, crease, score, or otherwise pattern the substrate to facilitate the three-dimensional arrangement.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 26, 2020
    Date of Patent: October 22, 2024
    Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Samuel E. Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20230133655
    Abstract: A method for removing organic or inorganic micropollutants from aqueous solutions includes adding a biomass of biomaterial to the solutions, the biomaterial being an active or inactive biological organism, such as a yeast, having affinity for biosorption (adsorption by the biomass)of an organic or inorganic micropollutant present in the solution at, or below, a parts-per-billion concentration, and controlling the pH and temperature of the solution, as well as contact time and agitation, to be within a range suitable for biosorption of the at micropollutant by the biomaterial. The amount of biomass added to the solution may be calculated according to the amount of solution, the concentration of the micropollutant in the solution, and the total amount of the micropollutant that can be biosorbed by a particular quantity of the inactive or active biomaterial. In a preferred embodiment, the biomaterial is obtained from Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 8, 2022
    Publication date: May 4, 2023
    Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Patritsia Maria Stathatou, Filippos Tourlomousis, Christos Edouardos Athanasiou, Andreas Mershin, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20230113729
    Abstract: A method of forming a structural honeycomb includes cutting and folding a substrate sheet according to predetermined cutting and folding patterns and fold angles that cause the sheet to form a honeycomb having cells that each have at least one face abutting, or nearly abutting, the face of another cell. The honeycomb is then stabilized by joining abutting, or nearly abutting, faces to hold the honeycomb together. The honeycomb may have a prespecified three-dimensional shape. The folding pattern may include corrugation, canted corrugation, or zig-zag folds. Joining may employ fixed and/or reversible joinery, including slotted cross section, tabbed strip, angled strip, integral skin, sewn, or laced. At least some folds may be partially-closed to create bends and twists in the honeycomb structure. Some surfaces of the honeycomb may be covered with a skin or face sheet. The substrate sheet may have flexible electronic traces.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 2, 2022
    Publication date: April 13, 2023
    Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Samuel Eli Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Patent number: 11433633
    Abstract: A method of forming a structural honeycomb includes cutting and folding a substrate sheet according to predetermined cutting and folding patterns and fold angles that cause the sheet to form a honeycomb having cells that each have at least one face abutting, or nearly abutting, the face of another cell. The honeycomb is then stabilized by joining abutting, or nearly abutting, faces to hold the honeycomb together. The honeycomb may have a prespecified three-dimensional shape. The folding pattern may include corrugation, canted corrugation, or zig-zag folds. Joining may employ fixed and/or reversible joinery, including slotted cross section, tabbed strip, angled strip, integral skin, sewn, or laced. At least some folds may be partially-closed to create bends and twists in the honeycomb structure. Some surfaces of the honeycomb may be covered with a skin or face sheet. The substrate sheet may have flexible electronic traces.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 27, 2016
    Date of Patent: September 6, 2022
    Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Samuel Eli Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20220169995
    Abstract: A trans-disciplinary system for cell-free biosynthesis includes a cell-free transcription-translation (TX-TL) tool and modular, generalizable microfluidic architectures. Both components of the system are independently functional and are combinable into a cell-free biosynthesis platform. In the first component, modular plasmid libraries are used to program bacterial cell-free TX-TL systems. Each plasmid holds one gene or operon, and all the genes are controlled by the same promoter, so that the stoichiometry of enzyme synthesis is determined by the stoichiometry of plasmids in the reaction. In the second part, in order to facilitate high throughput mixing and matching of gene units from the modular plasmid libraries, a modular, reconfigurable, flexible, and scalable microfluidic architecture is employed.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 6, 2021
    Publication date: June 2, 2022
    Applicants: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Regents of the University of Minnesota
    Inventors: Andreas Mershin, Vincent Noireaux, James Francis Pelletier, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Patent number: 11099243
    Abstract: Magnetic load cells that measure force and/or torque are constructed from magnets and one or more arrays of magnetic field sensors. The magnetic field sensors are structured in a tight array where the array is attached to a first portion of a frame. The magnets are operated in pairs polarized in opposition to one-another. In particular, pairs of concentric magnets create sharp field boundaries. The magnets are attached to a second portion of the frame with the magnets separated from the array of field sensors by a small gap. The second portion of the frame is free to displace or rotate in relation to the first portion of the frame when a force or torque is applied to it. The displacement results in a measurable differential change in magnetic field reported by the array that can be sampled and processed to relate to the applied force or torque.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 2, 2018
    Date of Patent: August 24, 2021
    Inventors: Samuel E. Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20200387657
    Abstract: A method of producing inductive sensors, including LVDTs and inductive encoders, manufactured by plotting fine wire onto a planar substrate. A sensor is constructed using a computer-controlled machine to place wire onto a planar adhesive substrate. This substrate forms a predictable and uniform surface to deposit each turn of wire, and so the placement accuracy is considerably better than conventional coil winding. This planar substrate can then be manipulated into a desired three-dimensional shape (e.g., by folding, rolling, corrugating, winding, etc.), carrying the wire along with it. In particular, the same CNC machine used to place the wire can be used to cut, crease, score, or otherwise pattern the substrate to facilitate the three-dimensional arrangement.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 26, 2020
    Publication date: December 10, 2020
    Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Samuel E. Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20200370615
    Abstract: A method and system of curved crease foldcores as energy absorbers with rule lines can that lie parallel in the flat state. Corrugated sheet is bonded to the foldcore material such that the corrugations align with the ruling. The curved creases are then cut from the corrugated layer. The image of the corrugation lines under the folding motion remains a line, and the corrugated structure survives and reinforces the folding mechanism. The corrugation significantly increases the second area moment of inertia about the crushing direction, while leaving the second area moment of inertia about the perpendicular direction largely unchanged. Under compressive failure, the corrugated foldcore fails progressively, rather than catastrophically. Also, the corrugations enforce the curved crease pattern, allowing the required curved panels to be bent while disallowing other deformations.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 26, 2020
    Publication date: November 26, 2020
    Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Samuel E. Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Patent number: 10800127
    Abstract: Flexural digital materials are discrete parts that can be assembled into a lattice structure to produce an actuatable structure capable of coordinated reversible spatially-distributed deformation. The structure comprises a set of discrete flexural digital material units assembled according to a lattice geometry, with a majority of the discrete units being connected, or adapted to be connected, to at least two other units according to the geometry. In response to certain types of loading of the structure, a coordinated reversible spatially-distributed deformation of at least part of the structure occurs. The deformation of the structure is due to the shape or material composition of the discrete units, the configuration of connections between the units, and/or the configuration of the lattice geometry. Exemplary types of such actuatable structures include airplane wing sections and robotic leg structures.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 7, 2017
    Date of Patent: October 13, 2020
    Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Kenneth C. Cheung, Samuel Eli Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20190225949
    Abstract: A trans-disciplinary system for cell-free biosynthesis includes a cell-free transcription-translation (TX-TL) tool and modular, generalizable microfluidic architectures. Both components of the system are independently functional and are combinable into a cell-free biosynthesis platform. In the first component, modular plasmid libraries are used to program bacterial cell-free TX-TL systems. Each plasmid holds one gene or operon, and all the genes are controlled by the same promoter, so that the stoichiometry of enzyme synthesis is determined by the stoichiometry of plasmids in the reaction. In the second part, in order to facilitate high throughput mixing and matching of gene units from the modular plasmid libraries, a modular, reconfigurable, flexible, and scalable microfluidic architecture is employed.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 20, 2018
    Publication date: July 25, 2019
    Applicants: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Regents of the University of Minnesota
    Inventors: Andreas Mershin, Vincent Noireaux, James Francis Pelletier, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20190146043
    Abstract: Magnetic load cells that measure force and/or torque are constructed from magnets and one or more arrays of magnetic field sensors. The magnetic field sensors are structured in a tight array where the array is attached to a first portion of a frame. The magnets are operated in pairs polarized in opposition to one-another. In particular, pairs of concentric magnets create sharp field boundaries. The magnets are attached to a second portion of the frame with the magnets separated from the array of field sensors by a small gap. The second portion of the frame is free to displace or rotate in relation to the first portion of the frame when a force or torque is applied to it. The displacement results in a measurable differential change in magnetic field reported by the array that can be sampled and processed to relate to the applied force or torque.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 2, 2018
    Publication date: May 16, 2019
    Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Samuel E. Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20180272588
    Abstract: Issues with pleat walled honeycombs are solved by replacing polygonal creases with curved creases. As with a conventional straight-walled honeycomb, these strips can be combined into a space-filling honeycomb structure. The benefits of these curved creases are threefold. First, the stress concentrations mentioned above with pleat-walled honeycombs are mitigated. The stress due to finite material thickness is spread more evenly over the crease line, instead of being concentrated at a point, as with pleat walled honeycombs. As a result, the maximal value observed is lower and the adverse effects are reduced. Second, the curved creases also serve to give better control over material properties, and third, the curved crease honeycombs do not require any of the horizontally-running creases. The curves are typically mathematical curves that can be computed algebraically or by solving a differential equation.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 23, 2018
    Publication date: September 27, 2018
    Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Samuel E. Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20180162087
    Abstract: Flexural digital materials are discrete parts that can be assembled into a lattice structure to produce an actuatable structure capable of coordinated reversible spatially-distributed deformation. The structure comprises a set of discrete flexural digital material units assembled according to a lattice geometry, with a majority of the discrete units being connected, or adapted to be connected, to at least two other units according to the geometry. In response to certain types of loading of the structure, a coordinated reversible spatially-distributed deformation of at least part of the structure occurs. The deformation of the structure is due to the shape or material composition of the discrete units, the configuration of connections between the units, and/or the configuration of the lattice geometry. Exemplary types of such actuatable structures include airplane wing sections and robotic leg structures.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 7, 2017
    Publication date: June 14, 2018
    Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Kenneth C. Cheung, Samuel Eli Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Patent number: 9809001
    Abstract: Flexural digital materials are discrete parts that can be assembled into a lattice structure to produce an actuatable structure capable of coordinated reversible spatially-distributed deformation. The structure comprises a set of discrete flexural digital material units assembled according to a lattice geometry, with a majority of the discrete units being connected, or adapted to be connected, to at least two other units according to the geometry. In response to certain types of loading of the structure, a coordinated reversible spatially-distributed deformation of at least part of the structure occurs. The deformation of the structure is due to the shape or material composition of the discrete units, the configuration of connections between the units, and/or the configuration of the lattice geometry. Exemplary types of such actuatable structures include airplane wing sections and robotic leg structures.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 7, 2014
    Date of Patent: November 7, 2017
    Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Kenneth C. Cheung, Samuel Eli Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20170182723
    Abstract: A method of forming a structural honeycomb includes cutting and folding a substrate sheet according to predetermined cutting and folding patterns and fold angles that cause the sheet to form a honeycomb having cells that each have at least one face abutting, or nearly abutting, the face of another cell. The honeycomb is then stabilized by joining abutting, or nearly abutting, faces to hold the honeycomb together. The honeycomb may have a prespecified three-dimensional shape. The folding pattern may include corrugation, canted corrugation, or zig-zag folds. Joining may employ fixed and/or reversible joinery, including slotted cross section, tabbed strip, angled strip, integral skin, sewn, or laced. At least some folds may be partially-closed to create bends and twists in the honeycomb structure. Some surfaces of the honeycomb may be covered with a skin or face sheet. The substrate sheet may have flexible electronic traces.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 27, 2016
    Publication date: June 29, 2017
    Inventors: Samuel Eli Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Patent number: 9525330
    Abstract: An electropermanent linear actuator has a stator, forcer, drive circuitry, and feedback control mechanism. The stator includes at least one electropermanent magnet with a coil that passes current pulses that change the magnetization of the magnet, which change persists after current is removed. The forcer moves with respect to the stator in response to the persistent changes in magnetization. Drive circuitry controls the position or speed of the actuator by controlling the timing, magnitude, and/or shape of the current pulses. The voltage and duration of pulses are of sufficient magnitude to cause the magnetization change to persist after cessation of current, with voltage and current returning substantially to zero between pulses. The feedback control mechanism determines, based on actuator velocity or position, when the next current pulse should be issued, pulse issuance being timed so that the actuator will continue to move throughout the absence of applied current between pulses.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 18, 2014
    Date of Patent: December 20, 2016
    Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Ara Knaian, Neil A. Gershenfeld, Maxim Lobovsky
  • Publication number: 20160164394
    Abstract: An electropermanent linear actuator has a stator, forcer, drive circuitry, and feedback control mechanism. The stator includes at least one electropermanent magnet with a coil that passes current pulses that change the magnetization of the magnet, which change persists after current is removed. The forcer moves with respect to the stator in response to the persistent changes in magnetization. Drive circuitry controls the position or speed of the actuator by controlling the timing, magnitude, and/or shape of the current pulses. The voltage and duration of pulses are of sufficient magnitude to cause the magnetization change to persist after cessation of current, with voltage and current returning substantially to zero between pulses. The feedback control mechanism determines, based on actuator velocity or position, when the next current pulse should be issued, pulse issuance being timed so that the actuator will continue to move throughout the absence of applied current between pulses.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 18, 2014
    Publication date: June 9, 2016
    Applicant: MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    Inventors: Ara Knaian, Neil A. Gershenfeld, Maxim Lobovsky
  • Publication number: 20160002611
    Abstract: A trans-disciplinary system for cell-free biosynthesis includes a cell-free transcription-translation (TX-TL) tool and modular, generalizable microfluidic architectures. Both components of the system are independently functional and are combinable into a cell-free biosynthesis platform. In the first component, modular plasmid libraries are used to program bacterial cell-free TX-TL systems. Each plasmid holds one gene or operon, and all the genes are controlled by the same promoter, so that the stoichiometry of enzyme synthesis is determined by the stoichiometry of plasmids in the reaction. In the second part, in order to facilitate high throughput mixing and matching of gene units from the modular plasmid libraries, a modular, reconfigurable, flexible, and scalable microfluidic architecture is employed.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 9, 2015
    Publication date: January 7, 2016
    Applicants: REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA, MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    Inventors: Andreas Mershin, Vincent Noireaux, James Francis Pelletier, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20140302261
    Abstract: Flexural digital materials are discrete parts that can be assembled into a lattice structure to produce an actuatable structure capable of coordinated reversible spatially-distributed deformation. The structure comprises a set of discrete flexural digital material units assembled according to a lattice geometry, with a majority of the discrete units being connected, or adapted to be connected, to at least two other units according to the geometry. In response to certain types of loading of the structure, a coordinated reversible spatially-distributed deformation of at least part of the structure occurs. The deformation of the structure is due to the shape or material composition of the discrete units, the configuration of connections between the units, and/or the configuration of the lattice geometry. Exemplary types of such actuatable structures include airplane wing sections and robotic leg structures.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 7, 2014
    Publication date: October 9, 2014
    Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Kenneth C. Cheung, Samuel Eli Calisch, Neil A. Gershenfeld
  • Publication number: 20140300211
    Abstract: Discrete motion systems move relative to a lattice, using bistable mechanisms to snap between lattice locations. A discrete motion system includes a lattice having a regular configuration of attachment points, one or more motion modules that move across the lattice in discrete increments, and controllers that direct the modules. A module includes a body, actuators, and feet having mechanisms for attaching and detaching the module from the lattice. The module may include actuated joints that cause movement of arm structures to engage and disengage the feet from the lattice. The module may be a digital inchworm, and may be a relative assembler having at least one assembler arm. A method for discrete extensible construction includes creating a lattice having a regular configuration of attachment points, causing a discrete motion relative assembler to systematically move across the lattice in discrete increments, and causing placement of materials by the assembler arm.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 6, 2014
    Publication date: October 9, 2014
    Applicant: MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    Inventors: Nadya M. Peek, William Kai Langford, Neil A. Gershenfeld, Matthew Eli Carney