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Purdue University

Smart Tupperware

Smart Tupperware(TM)


Did you ever go to the supermarket to buy milk and wonder, "While I'm here, do I need to buy cereal?" With Smart Tupperware and your trusty SmartPhone, you'll never have to wonder again! Students in the Collaborative Robotics Lab are creating "Smart Tupperware(TM)" in an effort to build infrastructure for the intelligent kitchen of the future.

Instrumented kitchen dry goods containers will monitor the state of fill and physical properties of the foods within. The state of fill will be maintained to keep the shopping list current on what items to buy. The physical properties will be used to allow the system to determine, on its own, what is contained in each container. Because the containers (and sensors) must be very cheap to be practical, the individual containers must be able to determine their contents with minimal sensory information. Enter the Community of Tupperware. The system will be web-aware and interconnected in order to determine the contents, relying on a vast array of information resources and other intelligent products within the home and beyond.

No endorsement by Tupperware Corp. is implied and the Tupperware trademark is the property of Tupperware Corp.

Smart Tupperware Block Diagram
Power is the primary constraint that drives computation, communication, and sensing.

A practical shopping list app is the user's primary interface to the system. This list is automatically updated when food stuffs in the kitchen containers gets low.

Polymer Displays

We're currently working on neuromorphic architectures and Form + Function 4-D Printing with Prof. Robert Nawrocki from the Engineering Technology department. Our goal is to develop a printable, flexible display technology that can be deposited on the surface of a Tupperware container to provide programmable information. Below is a mock-up of what a conventional, rigid display might look like:

Smart Tupperware Removable Display Smart Tupperware Removable Display

Power and the ability to survive the microwave and dishwasher remain key design constraints.

Smart Tupperware OLED

We are developing organic LEDs on flexible substrates.

Smart Tupperware(TM) Chart


Energy Scavenging Publications

Commercial Sources for Components

Special Thanks

Thanks to Tupperware for donating a large variety of containers for our undergraduate Senior Design project.

Copyright: © 2003,2006,2010,2015,2016 by Richard M. Voyles


rvoyles [at] purdue [dot] edu

Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, (765) 494-3733