Francesco Mondada (born 17 March 1967) is a Swiss roboticist, engineer, and academic known for his work and research in mobile robotics, swarm robotics, and educational robotics. He is affiliated with École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, where he leads the MOBOTS research group. Mondada is known for developing robotic platforms, including the Khepera robot, e-puck robot, s-bot, marXbot, and Thymio, which have been widely adopted in robotics research and education.

Biography

Mondada was born in Locarno. He studied microengineering at EPFL, receiving a Master of Science degree in 1991 and a doctorate in 1997. During his doctoral research, he contributed to the development of miniature autonomous mobile robots, establishing the technical foundations for later work in collective and bio-inspired robotics.

Career

While completing his doctoral studies in the early 1990s, Mondada co-developed the Khepera mobile robot and co-founded K-Team SA in 1995.

Between 2001 and 2007, Mondada held postdoctoral and senior scientific appointments at EPFL, working with laboratories led by prominent roboticists including Dario Floreano, Roland Siegwart, and Hannes Bleuler. During this period he contributed to major European collaborative robotics projects, including Swarm-bots and Swarmanoid. In 2010, he assumed leadership of EPFL’s educational robotics research within the Swiss National Centre of Competence in Research Robotics. His earliest major contribution, the Khepera robot, became one of the widely used platforms in bio-inspired robotics and experimental control systems, appearing in thousands of scientific publications. Its modular architecture established a standard platform for evolutionary robotics research.

As principal designer of the s-bot platform for the European Swarm-bots project, Mondada developed one of the first physically self-organizing robotic systems capable of autonomous collective behavior. The project became a landmark in swarm robotics and was recognized by the European Commission as a major technological success. The robot was later listed by Wired among the “50 Best Robots Ever”.

Mondada subsequently led development of the e-puck robot, an open-hardware educational platform widely used in university robotics curricula, and later the marXbot system for modular swarm experimentation. In 2010, he co-created Thymio, an open-source educational robot designed for primary and secondary education.

His later research expanded into biohybrid systems and robot-animal interaction, including robotic platforms used to study collective fish behavior and social interaction mechanisms. Across these projects, Mondada’s work has emphasized mechatronic precision, open-source accessibility, and the integration of robotics into both scientific research and formal education systems.

Selected publications

References

  • Professional homepage with a list of publications (Google scholar)
  • Mobots group homepage of the research group of F. Mondada
  • Personal homepage