Team

Carlo Ratti - Director
Assaf Biderman - Associate Director
Luigi Farrauto - Team Leader
Carnaven Chiu - Interactive Designer
Adam Pruden
David Anderson
Malima Wolf
Diego Maniloff
Sey Min
Rex Britter
Lindsey Hoshaw
Jennifer Dunnam
David Lee
Kristian Kloeckl
Dietmar Offenhuber
Jan Kokol
Phil Salesses
Matthew Kai Johnson Roberson
Walter Nicolino
Giovanni de Niederhausern
Samuel Colle Dominguez Maldonado
Andrea Cassi
Alberto Bottero
Filipa Carvalho
Eric Baczuk
Brendan Englot
Rob Hummel
Brooks Reed

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By autonomously navigating the water’s surface, Seaswarm proposes a new system for ocean-skimming and oil removal.Seaswarm uses a photovoltaic powered conveyor belt made of a thin nanowire mesh to propel itself and collect oil. The nanomaterial, patented at MIT, can absorb up to 20 times its weight in oil. The flexible conveyor belt softly rolls over the ocean’s surface, absorbing oil while deflecting water because of its hydrophobic properties.

Seaswarm is intended to work as a fleet, or “swarm” of vehicles, which communicate their location through GPS and WiFi in order to create an organized system for collection that can work continuously without human support. Because they are smaller than commercial skimmers attached to large fishing vessels, they are able to navigate hard to reach places like estuaries and coast lines. Seaswarm works by detecting the edge of a spill and moving inward until it has removed the oil from a single site before joining other vehicles that are still cleaning. Oil is "digested" locally so that Seaswarm does not need to make repeated trips back to shore, which would dramatically slow collection time.

The fleet uses cutting edge nanotechnology to solve current environmental problems while envisioning long-term solutions for the future. With a new design strategy we can revive and preserve the quality of our oceans.