Abstract
This review proposes the concept of a “frugal twin,” similar to a digital twin, but for physical experiments.
Frugal twins range from simple toy examples to low-cost surrogates of high-cost research systems. For example, a color-mixing self-driving laboratory (SDL) can serve as a low-cost version of a costly multi-step chemical discovery SDL. Frugal twins already provide hands-on experience for SDLs with low costs and low risks. They can also offer as test beds for software prototyping (e.g., optimization, data infrastructure), and a low barrier to entry for democratizing SDLs. However, there is room
for improvement. The true value of frugal twins
can be realized in three core areas. Firstly, hardware
and software modularity; secondly, purpose-built
design (human-inspired vs. hardware-centric
vs. human-in-the-loop); and thirdly state-of-the-art
(SOTA) software (e.g., multi-fidelity optimization).
We also describe the ethical benefits and risks that
come with the democratization of science through
frugal twins. For future work, we suggest ideas for
new frugal twins, SDL educational course outcomes,
and a classification scheme for autonomy levels.