1,194 research outputs found

    I-support soft arm for assistance tasks: a new manufacturing approach based on 3D printing and characterization

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    AbstractSoft robotics is an emerging scientific field well known for being widespread employed in several applications where dexterity and safe interaction are of major importance. In particular, a very challenging scenario in which it is involved concerns bio-medical field. In the last few years, several soft robotic devices have been developed to assist elderly people in daily tasks. In this paper, the authors present a new manufacturing approach for the fabrication of I-SUPPORT, a soft arm used to help needful people during shower activities. The proposed I-SUPPORT version, based on pneumatic and cable-driven actuation, is manufactured using Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF), the most common and inexpensive Additive Manufacturing (AM) technology. The advantages offered by FFF technology compared to traditional manufacturing methods regard: (i) the possibility to increase the automation degree of the process by reducing manual tasks, (ii) the decrease of assembly operations and (iii) an improvement in terms of supply chain. Moreover, the constitutive I-SUPPORT elements have been printed separately to save time, reduce materials and optimize the waste in case of failure. Afterwards, the proposed soft robotic arm has been tested to evaluate the performances and of the chambers, module and the whole I-SUPPORT manipulator

    The waterbomb actuator: a new origami-based pneumatic soft muscle

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    This project introduces a new Pneumatic Artificial Muscle (PAM) design based on an origami structure. This artificial muscle is designed to operate at a very low range of pressures while being lightweight and compliant. It is also designed to reduce the pressure threshold and hysteresis problems present on other PAMs like the McKibben actuator. These properties are achieved thanks to a rearranging membrane based on the Waterbomb pattern, which can contract upon inflation while keeping the surface area constant. This concept has been tested using paper prototypes coated with silicone. We created thee different structures (4x8, 6x12 and 8x16 cells waterbomb actuators) from the same paper sheet (14x28cm2) and we actuated them under loads of 2, 4 and 7N. The 4x8 was discarded, but the 6x12 and 8x16 actuators contracted a maximum of 12.5% of the original length (≃10cm) while the operating pressures remained under 5Pa. We also proposed a novel approach to 3D print these actuators using a Stratasys Objet260 Connex3 3D printer. The main idea consists in creating a flat structure that can self-assemble using a technique known as 4D Printing. The pattern is printed as a flat sheet where the hinges are composites composed of an elastomeric material and shape memory polymer (SMP) fibers. These hinges can be activated through a thermomechanical process inducing a self-folding effect. Unfortunately, we were not able to verify this fabrication process due to the lack of material availability

    Design and Development of Soft Earthworm Robot Driven by Fibrous Artificial Muscles

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    Earthworm robots have proven their viability in the fields of medicine, reconnaissance, search and rescue, and infrastructure inspection. These robots are traditionally typically hard-shelled and must be tethered to whatever drives their locomotion. For this reason, truly autonomous capabilities are not yet feasible. The goal of this thesis is to introduce a robot that not only sets the groundwork for autonomous locomotion, but also is safe for human-robot interaction. This was done by ensuring that the actuation principle utilized by the robot is safe around humans and can work in an untethered design. Artificial muscle actuation allowed for these prerequisites to be met. These artificial muscles are made of fishing line and are twisted, wrapped in conductive heating wire, and then coiled around a mandrel rod. When electrical current passes through the heating wire, the artificial muscles expand or contract, depending on how they were created. After the muscles were manufactured, experiments were done to test their functionality. Data was collected via a series of experiments to investigate the effect of various processing parameters on the performance, such as the diameter of the mandrel coiling rod, the applied dead weight, the applied current, cyclic tests, and pulse tests. After acquiring data from the artificial muscles, a prototype was designed that would incorporate the expansion and contraction artificial muscles. This prototype featured two variable friction end caps on either side that were driven via expansion muscles, and a central actuation chamber driven via an antagonistic spring and contraction artificial muscle. The prototype proved its locomotion capabilities while remaining safe for human-robot interaction. Data was collected on the prototype in two experiments – one to observe the effect of varying induced currents on axial deformation and velocity, and one to observe the effect of varying deadweights on the same metrics. The prototype was not untethered, but future research in the implementation of an on-board power source and microcontroller could prove highly feasible with this design

    3D printed pneumatic soft actuators and sensors: their modeling, performance quantification, control and applications in soft robotic systems

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    Continued technological progress in robotic systems has led to more applications where robots and humans operate in close proximity and even physical contact in some cases. Soft robots, which are primarily made of highly compliant and deformable materials, provide inherently safe features, unlike conventional robots that are made of stiff and rigid components. These robots are ideal for interacting safely with humans and operating in highly dynamic environments. Soft robotics is a rapidly developing field exploiting biomimetic design principles, novel sensor and actuation concepts, and advanced manufacturing techniques. This work presents novel soft pneumatic actuators and sensors that are directly 3D printed in one manufacturing step without requiring postprocessing and support materials using low-cost and open-source fused deposition modeling (FDM) 3D printers that employ an off-the-shelf commercially available soft thermoplastic poly(urethane) (TPU). The performance of the soft actuators and sensors developed is optimized and predicted using finite element modeling (FEM) analytical models in some cases. A hyperelastic material model is developed for the TPU based on its experimental stress-strain data for use in FEM analysis. The novel soft vacuum bending (SOVA) and linear (LSOVA) actuators reported can be used in diverse robotic applications including locomotion robots, adaptive grippers, parallel manipulators, artificial muscles, modular robots, prosthetic hands, and prosthetic fingers. Also, the novel soft pneumatic sensing chambers (SPSC) developed can be used in diverse interactive human-machine interfaces including wearable gloves for virtual reality applications and controllers for soft adaptive grippers, soft push buttons for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education platforms, haptic feedback devices for rehabilitation, game controllers and throttle controllers for gaming and bending sensors for soft prosthetic hands. These SPSCs are directly 3D printed and embedded in a monolithic soft robotic finger as position and touch sensors for real-time position and force control. One of the aims of soft robotics is to design and fabricate robotic systems with a monolithic topology embedded with its actuators and sensors such that they can safely interact with their immediate physical environment. The results and conclusions of this thesis have significantly contributed to the realization of this aim

    One-shot additive manufacturing of robotic finger with embedded sensing and actuation

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    A main challenge in the additive manufacturing (AM) field is the possibility to create structures with embedded actuators and sensors: addressing this requirement would lead to a reduction of manual assembly tasks and product cost, pushing AM technologies into a new dimension for the fabrication of assembly-free smart objects. The main novelty of the present paper is the one shot fabrication of a 3D printed soft finger with an embedded shape memory alloy (SMA) actuator and two different 3D printed sensors (strain gauge and capacitive force sensor). 3D printed structures, fabricated with the proposed approach, can be immediately activated after their removal from the build plate, providing real-time feedback because of the embedded sensing units. Three different materials from two nozzles were extruded to fabricate the passive elements and sensing units of the proposed bioinspired robotic finger and a custom-made Cartesian pick and place robot (CPPR) was employed to integrate the SMA spring actuator into the 3D printed robotic finger during the fabrication processes. Another novelty of the present paper is the direct integration of SMA actuators during the 3D printing process. The low melting thermoplastic polycaprolactone (PCL) was extruded: its printing temperature of 70 °C is lower than the SMA austenitic start temperature, preventing the SMA activation during the manufacturing process. Two different sensors based on the piezoresistive principle and capacitive principle were studied, 3D printed and characterized, showing respectively a sensitivity ratio of change in resistance to finger bending angle to be 674.8 Ω∘Angle and a capacitance to force ratio of 0.53pFN . The proposed manufacturing approach paves the way for significant advancement of AM technologies in the field of smart structures with embedded actuators to provide real-time feedback, offering several advantages, especially in the soft robotics domain

    Soft Gloves: A Review on Recent Developments in Actuation, Sensing, Control and Applications

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    Interest in soft gloves, both robotic and haptic, has enormously grown over the past decade, due to their inherent compliance, which makes them particularly suitable for direct interaction with the human hand. Robotic soft gloves have been developed for hand rehabilitation, for ADLs assistance, or sometimes for both. Haptic soft gloves may be applied in virtual reality (VR) applications or to give sensory feedback in combination with prostheses or to control robots. This paper presents an updated review of the state of the art of soft gloves, with a particular focus on actuation, sensing, and control, combined with a detailed analysis of the devices according to their application field. The review is organized on two levels: a prospective review allows the highlighting of the main trends in soft gloves development and applications, and an analytical review performs an in-depth analysis of the technical solutions developed and implemented in the revised scientific research. Additional minor evaluations integrate the analysis, such as a synthetic investigation of the main results in the clinical studies and trials referred in literature which involve soft gloves

    AirLogic:Embedding Pneumatic Computation and I/O in 3D Models to Fabricate Electronics-Free Interactive Objects

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    Researchers have developed various tools and techniques towards the vision of on-demand fabrication of custom, interactive devices. Recentwork has 3D-printed artefacts like speakers, electromagnetic actuators, and hydraulic robots. However, these are non-trivial to instantiate as they require post-fabrication mechanical- or electronic assembly. We introduce AirLogic: a technique to create electronics-free, interactive objects by embedding pneumatic input, logic processing, and output widgets in 3D-printable models. AirLogic devices can perform basic computation on user inputs and create visible, audible, or haptic feedback; yet they do not require electronic circuits, physical assembly, or resetting between uses. Our library of 13 exemplar widgets can embed AirLogic-style computational capabilities in existing 3D models. We evaluate our widgets' performance-quantifying the loss of airfow (1) in each widget type, (2) based on printing orientation, and (3) from internal object geometry. Finally, we present fve applications that illustrate AirLogic's potential

    Characterization Of Commercially Available Conductive Filament And Their Application In Sensors And Actuators

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    The primary aim of this study is to contribute to the field of additives that would enable the fabrication of electrical sensors and actuators completely via Material Extrusion based Additive Manufacturing (MEAM). The second aim of the study is to provide the necessary characterization to facilitate the development of applications that predicts electrical part performance. The electrical characterization of two conductive poly-lactic acid (PLA) filaments, namely, c-PLA with carbon black and graphene PLA was performed to study the temperature coefficient of the resistance. Resistivity of carbon black filament was compared to a printed single layer and with that of a cube. The raw and printed c-PLA showed a positive temperature coefficient of resistance (α) ranging from ~0.03-0.01 ℃-1 while its counterpart in the study, graphene PLA, did not exhibit significant (α). Parts from graphene PLA with multilayer MEAM exhibited a negative α to a certain temperature before exhibiting positive α. The resistivity of the printed parts was 300 times higher for c-PLA and 1500 times for graphene PLA. However, no microstructural or chemical compositional changes were observed between the raw filaments and the printed parts. Due to the high α of the c-PLA, it was deemed as the better material for constructing electro thermal sensors and actuators using MEAM. First, c-PLA was used to fabricate and package a completely 3D printed flow meter that operates on the principle of Joule heating and hotwire anemometry. When the designed flowmeter was simulated using a finite element package, a flow sensitivity of -2.33 Ω sccm-1 and a relative change in resistivity of 0.036 sccm-1 was expected. For an operating voltage of 12-15 V, the experimental results showed a flow sensitivity within the range of 0.014-0.032 sccm-1 and the relative change in resistivity ranged from 0.039 – 0.065 sccm-1. Thus, a completely 3D printed flowmeter was demonstrated. Second, using the same principle of Joule heating, an actuator inspired from MEMS chevron grippers was designed, simulated, and fabricated. Simulation showed the feasibility of the structure and further predicted a displacement of a few hundred microns with a potential as low as 3 V with a cooling time as little less than 120 seconds. Experimentally, a displacement of 120.04, 97.05, and 88.96 ÎŒm were achieved in 15, 10, and 5 seconds with actuation potentials of 12.7, 13.8, and 17.9 V, respectively. As predicted by the simulation results, it took longer for the gripper to cool (close to 180 seconds) when compared to actuation times. During the above studies, we discovered the printing parameters altered the part resistance. Our final study examined how extrusion temperature and printing speed affects the impedance of the MEAM printed parts. Further, anisotropy in the impedance was observed and the influence of the interface to it was examined. From the experimental results, the anisotropy was quantified with a Z/F ratio and was found to be nearly constant, ~2.15±0.23. Impedance scaling with the number of interfaces was measured and showed conclusively that the interlayer bonding was the sole source for the observed Z/F ratio. Scanning electron microscope images shows the absence of air gaps at the interface, and energy dispersion spectroscopy shows the absence of oxidation at the interface. By investigating the role of print parameters and scaling of impedance with interfaces, a framework to model and predict electrical behavior of electro thermal sensors and actuators made via MEAM can be realized
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