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Video Editor: Abhishek Sharma
The world’s smallest house is built on a foundation that's 300 micrometers by 300 micrometers – about half the size of an average grain of sand!
It comes with all the expected features though: four walls, seven windows and a chimney.
It was crafted by nano-robotics researchers at Femto-ST Institute, in Besançon, France, and was made using a layer of silica set on the tip of an optical fibre. The house was built inside the scanning electron microscope's vacuum chamber – with a technique similar to the art of origami.
That fibre that was used is less than the width of a human hair, and in order create the house, researchers used a platform called uRobotex.
It is hoped that the team can use this technology in the future to insert such fibres into blood vessels.
The dwelling was recently revealed in a paper published in the Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A.
(With inputs from AP)
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