Accelerating Material Science with PoLARIS
AI Lab Discovers Lead-Free Nanomaterials in 12 Hours
The PoLARIS system used autonomous microfluidics to identify brighter, safer light-emitting materials at record speed.
An autonomous microfluidic laboratory system featuring clear tubes filled with glowing light-emitting nanomaterials.
Photo: Avantgarde News
Researchers have launched PoLARIS, a new autonomous microfluidic laboratory designed to accelerate the discovery of light-emitting nanomaterials [1]. During its first 12-hour campaign, the AI-driven system navigated billions of potential chemical recipes [1].
The platform successfully identified brighter, lead-free "double perovskite" nanoplatelets [1]. This complex task traditionally requires years of manual human experimentation to complete [1]. By focusing on lead-free options, the system prioritizes the creation of safer materials for future electronic applications [1].
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Avantgarde News Desk covers accelerating material science with polaris and editorial analysis for Avantgarde News.