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MIT researchers revive 40-year-old triangular zipper concept now made possible by 3D printing, creates shape-shifting robots

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Image accompanies the article at Tom's Hardware. No description was extracted from the source.

Researchers at MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory have developed a three-sided zipper that transforms 3D-printed floppy structures into rigid, load-bearing forms in seconds.

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Summary

Unlike conventional zippers that connect two flat surfaces in 2D, the Y-Zipper joins three flexible arms into a rigid 3D triangular tube. The concept originated in 1985 with MIT professor William Freeman, who proposed a triangular zipper system intended to rapidly assemble objects such as tents, furniture, and containers. The CSAIL team developed software that allows users to customize how the zipper behaves once assembled. The engineering principle behind the system is relatively straightforward: triangles are inherently rigid.

Read full article at Tom's Hardware →