Perspective on Utilizing Foundation Models for Laboratory Automation in Materials Research
Perspective on Utilizing Foundation Models for Laboratory Automation in Materials Research
This review explores the potential of foundation models to advance laboratory automation in the materials and chemical sciences. It emphasizes the dual roles of these models: cognitive functions for experimental planning and data analysis, and physical functions for hardware operations. While traditional laboratory automation has relied heavily on specialized, rigid systems, foundation models offer adaptability through their general-purpose intelligence and multimodal capabilities. Recent advancements have demonstrated the feasibility of using large language models (LLMs) and multimodal robotic systems to handle complex and dynamic laboratory tasks. However, significant challenges remain, including precision manipulation of hardware, integration of multimodal data, and ensuring operational safety. This paper outlines a roadmap highlighting future directions, advocating for close interdisciplinary collaboration, benchmark establishment, and strategic human-AI integration to realize fully autonomous experimental laboratories.
Kan Hatakeyama-Sato、Toshihiko Nishida、Kenta Kitamura、Yoshitaka Ushiku、Koichi Takahashi、Yuta Nabae、Teruaki Hayakawa
自动化技术、自动化技术设备计算技术、计算机技术
Kan Hatakeyama-Sato,Toshihiko Nishida,Kenta Kitamura,Yoshitaka Ushiku,Koichi Takahashi,Yuta Nabae,Teruaki Hayakawa.Perspective on Utilizing Foundation Models for Laboratory Automation in Materials Research[EB/OL].(2025-06-13)[2025-08-02].https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.12312.点此复制
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