Origami structures, characterized by predefined crease patterns and configurable properties, offer valuable insights for designing reconfigurable mechanisms. Inspired by diverse grasping states of the human finger and multi-mode characteristics of the Miura-ori unit, this paper proposes a novel finger mechanism capable of four distinct single degree-of-freedom (DOF) motion modes. Each mode corresponds to a distinct finger state, characterized by two interphalangeal joints that are either rotatable or nonrotatable. First, the Miura-ori unit equivalent linkage (PFSFL, plane-symmetric flat-deployable spherical four-bar linkage) is introduced, and its multi-mode characteristics are analyzed through an approach based on dual quaternions. Next, the finger mechanism is constructed by coupling specific links and joints of two PFSFLs, and its multi-mode kinematics are systematically demonstrated. Three such fingers are integrated with an orthogonal Bricard linkage to develop a multi-mode grasping mechanism. A pneumatically actuated, 3D printed gripper based on this mechanism is fabricated, and experimentally confirms its multi-mode grasping capability. The results demonstrate the potential of the proposed finger mechanism for developing reconfigurable grippers or hands with enhanced flexibility, adaptability, and multi-task capability
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