A new sort of loom!

One of the most important invention of mankind was the loom. A machine (powered by man till the industrial revolution) that could weave threads into a fabric.
We take fabric for granted nowadays but indeed it was an amazing feat to create it and invent the machine for producing it. Now, researchers at the MIT are taking the idea of loom one step forward: creating a fabric with very specific properties, and we have learnt in these last ten years that by using nanotechnology we can design materials with the physical characteristics we desire.
What they managed to do is to create a fabric as a set of layers separated by nano wrinkles that can selectively be transparent to certain wavelengths of light or sound. It is like having a cloth that will let only certain sound go through, or a certain colour!
More than that. The fabric can be modified in real time to change its "transparency" to certain wavelengths. 
One application researchers are considering is to improve cancer diagnoses. In several cased cancer can be detected by using ultrasound but the problem with current ultrasound systems is the lack of resolution so that it is almost impossible to pinpoint a cancer in a soft tissue. Not so with this fabric. By changing its permeability to different sound waves it becomes possibile to increase the resolution and pinpoint the tumour area.
The researchers have developed this fabric first at the computer, simulating the characteristics they were looking for and then designing the nano-wrinkles to cease them.
We have really entered into a new dimension of creating artecraft: we can design not just their shape but also their physical properties by assembling bottom up the molecules.
ICT has entered into the creation of new products in a quite unexpected way and it will be even more so in the future. We are now (including in the "we" the EIT ICT LABS in its cyber-physical system area) entering the "industry 4.0", a industry where production is mediated by communicating robots, partly operating within a factorial, partly at the sale point and partly in the homes of the customers, but on the horizon we already see the "industry 5.0", the one where the fabrication material are designed at the computer to ensure the desired physical properties.

About Roberto Saracco

Roberto Saracco fell in love with technology and its implications long time ago. His background is in math and computer science. Until April 2017 he led the EIT Digital Italian Node and then was head of the Industrial Doctoral School of EIT Digital up to September 2018. Previously, up to December 2011 he was the Director of the Telecom Italia Future Centre in Venice, looking at the interplay of technology evolution, economics and society. At the turn of the century he led a World Bank-Infodev project to stimulate entrepreneurship in Latin America. He is a senior member of IEEE where he leads the New Initiative Committee and co-chairs the Digital Reality Initiative. He is a member of the IEEE in 2050 Ad Hoc Committee. He teaches a Master course on Technology Forecasting and Market impact at the University of Trento. He has published over 100 papers in journals and magazines and 14 books.