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Technische Universität München

TUM ELI: First AI experimentation space for automatic knowledge generation

TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF MUNICH

PRESS RELEASE

51 million euros for TUM Center for Embodied Laboratory Intelligence

First AI experimentation space for automatic knowledge generation

  • Bringing macro technologies to the nano-scale world
  • AI to play a key role
  • Top scientists from the Munich Institute of Robotics and Machine Intelligence (MIRMI) in leadership positions

The Scientific Council has approved the construction of a new research building at the Technical University of Munich (TUM). The TUM Center for Embodied Laboratory Intelligence (TUM ELI) will receive 51 million euros in funding starting in 2024. The research facility is scheduled to go into operation in 2028.

There is now little if any automation in experimental research processes. Researchers spend one third of their time actually performing their experiments in the lab. “The goal in TUM ELI will be to automate the design and execution of experiments,” explains Prof. Eckehard Steinbach, one of the co-developers of the concept: “An ‘ELI-AI’ system will communicate with the researcher, come up with experiments and suggest ways of continuing or modifying them,” says the Director Start-ups & Infrastructure at the Munich Institute of Robotics and Machine Intelligence (MIRMI) and head of the Chair of Media Technology at TUM. “The use of artificial intelligence harbors the potential for new solutions such as DNA-based structures to transport drugs within the body,” believes MIRMI Executive Director Prof. Sami Haddadin: “TUM ELI is designed to embody a robot-based lab-as-a-service concept and also to generate new knowledge through AI.” This will require the development of new structures and mechanisms.

Science minister Blume highlights “deployment of advanced robotics systems”

Along with TUM ELI, five other research buildings will receive funding for 2024, including – also in relation to AI – the Center for AI-based Real-time Medical Diagnostics and Therapy (CARE-MED) in Erlangen. Bavaria’s science minister Markus Blume: “With two successful applications in Munich and Erlangen, Bavaria leads all states in this coveted federal/state funding program. This reaffirms our position as Germany’s top innovation location! The planned research at ELI into refining scientific lab experiments through advanced robotics systems will give us another big push.”

TUM ELI: Focus on the nano/micro world

The fundamental idea behind TUM ELI is to make the smallest robotic structures both the subject of research and part of the solution. TUM professor Steinbach asserts confidently: “We are moving into exciting dimensions that involve challenges never seen before.” Existing processes and technologies for communications or information processing in the macro world cannot be transferred to the nano/micro world, for example. This calls for entirely new solutions. The concept encompasses research initiatives extending from “intelligently networked assistants” and “cooperative fabrication of nano and micro machines” to “holistic communications and information processing”.

From micromachines and nano printers to scanning electron microscopes

Technologies developed at TUM ELI will include micromachines that can move around inside a person, perhaps to collect and analyze tissue particles. The facility will contain advanced laboratory equipment such as a scanning electron microscope and a nano printer capable of being used by macro robots. “In that regard, we are thinking primarily of mobile platforms or cobots that will perform tasks for researchers, such as positioning samples to be studied under the microscope,” explains Steinbach.

At present MIRMI lacks the rooms and equipment for the automatic generation of knowledge in laboratory sciences. With TUM ELI, TUM is now creating this experimental space. It is also designed to serve as a shared facility and will become a center for leading edge research for scientists from around the world in the future.

Further information

  • TUM ELI will promote cross-location collaboration among top international researchers in robotics and machine learning (Prof. Sami Haddadin, Prof. Angela Schoellig), communications and computing (Prof. Holger Boche, Prof. Wolfgang Kellerer), perception and human-robot interactions (Prof. Sandra Hirche, Prof. Eckehard Steinbach) and nano/micro machines (Prof. Berna Özkale Edelmann, Prof. Hendrik Dietz, Prof. Friedrich Simmel).
  • Compact information on the robotics and ai institute Munich Institute of Robotics and Machine Intelligence (MIRMI)

Scientific contact

Professor Eckehard Steinbach

Chair for Media Technology

Director Start-ups & Infrastructure at the Munich Institute of Robotics and Machine Intelligence (MIRMI)

Technical University of Munich (TUM)

eckehard.steinbach@tum.de

TUM Communications Center contact

Andreas Schmitz

Press Officer, Robotics and Machine Intelligence

0162-27 46 193

andreas.schmitz@tum.de

www.tum.de

The Technical University of Munich (TUM) is one of Europe’s leading research universities, with more than 600 professors, 50,000 students, and 11,000 academic and non-academic staff. Its focus areas are the engineering sciences, natural sciences, life sciences and medicine, combined with economic and social sciences. TUM acts as an entrepreneurial university that promotes talents and creates value for society. In that it profits from having strong partners in science and industry. It is represented worldwide with the TUM Asia campus in Singapore as well as offices in Beijing, Brussels, Mumbai, San Francisco, and São Paulo. Nobel Prize winners and inventors such as Rudolf Diesel, Carl von Linde, and Rudolf Mößbauer have done research at TUM. In 2006, 2012, and 2019 it won recognition as a German "Excellence University." In international rankings, TUM regularly places among the best universities in Germany.

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