111 research outputs found

    A Comparison of Pneumatic Actuators for Soft Growing Vine Robots

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    Soft pneumatic actuators are used to steer soft growing "vine" robots while being flexible enough to undergo the tip eversion required for growth. In this study, we compared the performance of three types of pneumatic actuators in terms of their ability to perform eversion, quasi-static bending, dynamic motion, and force output: the pouch motor, the cylindrical pneumatic artificial muscle (cPAM), and the fabric pneumatic artificial muscle (fPAM). The pouch motor is advantageous for prototyping due to its simple manufacturing process. The cPAM exhibits superior bending behavior and produces the highest forces, while the fPAM actuates fastest and everts at the lowest pressure. We evaluated a range of dimensions for each actuator type. Larger actuators can produce more significant deformations and forces, but smaller actuators inflate faster and can evert at a lower pressure. Because vine robots are lightweight, the effect of gravity on the functionality of different actuators is minimal. We developed a new analytical model that predicts the pressure-to-bending behavior of vine robot actuators. Using the actuator results, we designed and demonstrated a 4.8 m long vine robot equipped with highly maneuverable 60x60 mm cPAMs in a three-dimensional obstacle course. The vine robot was able to move around sharp turns, travel through a passage smaller than its diameter, and lift itself against gravity.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, 3 table

    Continuum Mechanical Models for Design and Characterization of Soft Robots

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    The emergence of ``soft'' robots, whose bodies are made from stretchable materials, has fundamentally changed the way we design and construct robotic systems. Demonstrations and research show that soft robotic systems can be useful in rehabilitation, medical devices, agriculture, manufacturing and home assistance. Increasing need for collaborative, safe robotic devices have combined with technological advances to create a compelling development landscape for soft robots. However, soft robots are not yet present in medical and rehabilitative devices, agriculture, our homes, and many other human-collaborative and human-interactive applications. This gap between promise and practical implementation exists because foundational theories and techniques that exist in rigid robotics have not yet been developed for soft robots. Theories in traditional robotics rely on rigid body displacements via discrete joints and discrete actuators, while in soft robots, kinematic and actuation functions are blended, leading to nonlinear, continuous deformations rather than rigid body motion. This dissertation addresses the need for foundational techniques using continuum mechanics. Three core questions regarding the use of continuum mechanical models in soft robotics are explored: (1) whether or not continuum mechanical models can describe existing soft actuators, (2) which physical phenomena need to be incorporated into continuum mechanical models for their use in a soft robotics context, and (3) how understanding on continuum mechanical phenomena may form bases for novel soft robot architectures. Theoretical modeling, experimentation, and design prototyping tools are used to explore Fiber-Reinforced Elastomeric Enclosures (FREEs), an often-used soft actuator, and to develop novel soft robot architectures based on auxetic behavior. This dissertation develops a continuum mechanical model for end loading on FREEs. This model connects a FREE’s actuation pressure and kinematic configuration to its end loads by considering stiffness of its elastomer and fiber reinforcement. The model is validated against a large experimental data set and compared to other FREE models used by roboticists. It is shown that the model can describe the FREE’s loading in a generalizable manner, but that it is bounded in its peak performance. Such a model can provide the novel function of evaluating the performance of FREE designs under high loading without the costs of building and testing prototypes. This dissertation further explores the influence viscoelasticity, an inherent property of soft polymers, on end loading of FREEs. The viscoelastic model developed can inform soft roboticists wishing to exploit or avoid hysteresis and force reversal. The final section of the dissertations explores two contrasting styles of auxetic metamaterials for their uses in soft robotic actuation. The first metamaterial architecture is composed of beams with distributed compliance, which are placed antagonistic configurations on a variety of surfaces, giving ride to shape morphing behavior. The second metamaterial architecture studied is a ``kirigami’’ sheet with an orthogonal cut pattern, utilizing lumped compliance and strain hardening to permanently deploy from a compact shape to a functional one. This dissertation lays the foundation for design of soft robots by robust physical models, reducing the need for physical prototypes and trial-and-error approaches. The work presented provides tools for systematic exploration of FREEs under loading in a wide range of configurations. The work further develops new concepts for soft actuators based on continuum mechanical modeling of auxetic metamaterials. The work presented expands the available tools for design and development of soft robotic systems, and the available architectures for soft robot actuation.PHDMechanical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/163236/1/asedal_1.pd

    Design, modeling and implementation of a soft robotic neck for humanoid robots

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    Mención Internacional en el título de doctorSoft humanoid robotics is an emerging field that combines the flexibility and safety of soft robotics with the form and functionality of humanoid robotics. This thesis explores the potential for collaboration between these two fields with a focus on the development of soft joints for the humanoid robot TEO. The aim is to improve the robot’s adaptability and movement, which are essential for an efficient interaction with its environment. The research described in this thesis involves the development of a simple and easily transportable soft robotic neck for the robot, based on a 2 Degree of Freedom (DOF) Cable Driven Parallel Mechanism (CDPM). For its final integration into TEO, the proposed design is later refined, resulting in an efficiently scaled prototype able to face significant payloads. The nonlinear behaviour of the joints, due mainly to the elastic nature of their soft links, makes their modeling a challenging issue, which is addressed in this thesis from two perspectives: first, the direct and inverse kinematic models of the soft joints are analytically studied, based on CDPM mathematical models; second, a data-driven system identification is performed based on machine learning techniques. Both approaches are deeply studied and compared, both in simulation and experimentally. In addition to the soft neck, this thesis also addresses the design and prototyping of a soft arm capable of handling external loads. The proposed design is also tendon-driven and has a morphology with two main bending configurations, which provides more versatility compared to the soft neck. In summary, this work contributes to the growing field of soft humanoid robotics through the development of soft joints and their application to the humanoid robot TEO, showcasing the potential of soft robotics to improve the adaptability, flexibility, and safety of humanoid robots. The development of these soft joints is a significant achievement and the research presented in this thesis paves the way for further exploration and development in this field.La robótica humanoide blanda es un campo emergente que combina la flexibilidad y seguridad de la robótica blanda con la forma y funcionalidad de la robótica humanoide. Esta tesis explora el potencial de colaboración entre estos dos campos centrándose en el desarrollo de una articulación blanda para el cuello del robot humanoide TEO. El objetivo es mejorar la adaptabilidad y el movimiento del robot, esenciales para una interacción eficaz con su entorno. La investigación descrita en esta tesis consiste en el desarrollo de un prototipo sencillo y fácilmente transportable de cuello blando para el robot, basado en un mecanismo paralelo actuado por cable de 2 grados de libertad. Para su integración final en TEO, el diseño propuesto es posteriormente refinado, resultando en un prototipo eficientemente escalado capaz de manejar cargas significativas. El comportamiemto no lineal de estas articulaciones, debido fundamentalmente a la naturaleza elástica de sus eslabones blandos, hacen de su modelado un gran reto, que en esta tesis se aborda desde dos perspectivas diferentes: primero, los modelos cinemáticos directo e inverso de las articulaciones blandas se estudian analíticamente, basándose en modelos matemáticos de mecanismos paralelos actuados por cable; segundo, se aborda el problema de la identificación del sistema mediante técnicas basadas en machine learning. Ambas propuestas se estudian y comparan en profundidad, tanto en simulación como experimentalmente. Además del cuello blando, esta tesis también aborda el diseño de un brazo robótico blando capaz de manejar cargas externas. El diseño propuesto está igualmente basado en accionamiento por tendones y tiene una morfología con dos configuraciones principales de flexión, lo que proporciona una mayor versatilidad en comparación con el cuello robótico blando. En resumen, este trabajo contribuye al creciente campo de la robótica humanoide blanda mediante el desarrollo de articulaciones blandas y su aplicación al robot humanoide TEO, mostrando el potencial de la robótica blanda para mejorar la adaptabilidad, flexibilidad y seguridad de los robots humanoides. El desarrollo de estas articulaciones es una contribución significativa y la investigación presentada en esta tesis allana el camino hacia nuevos desarrollos y retos en este campo.Programa de Doctorado en Ingeniería Eléctrica, Electrónica y Automática por la Universidad Carlos III de MadridPresidenta: Cecilia Elisabet García Cena.- Secretario: Dorin Sabin Copaci.- Vocal: Martin Fodstad Stole

    Modular soft pneumatic actuator system design for compliance matching

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    The future of robotics is personal. Never before has technology been as pervasive as it is today, with advanced mobile electronics hardware and multi-level network connectivity pushing âsmartâ devices deeper into our daily lives through home automation systems, virtual assistants, and wearable activity monitoring. As the suite of personal technology around us continues to grow in this way, augmenting and offloading the burden of routine activities of daily living, the notion that this trend will extend to robotics seems inevitable. Transitioning robots from their current principal domain of industrial factory settings to domestic, workplace, or public environments is not simply a matter of relocation or reprogramming, however. The key differences between âtraditionalâ types of robots and those which would best serve personal, proximal, human interactive applications demand a new approach to their design. Chief among these are requirements for safety, adaptability, reliability, reconfigurability, and to a more practical extent, usability. These properties frame the context and objectives of my thesis work, which seeks to provide solutions and answers to not only how these features might be achieved in personal robotic systems, but as well what benefits they can afford. I approach the investigation of these questions from a perspective of compliance matching of hardware systems to their applications, by providing methods to achieve mechanical attributes complimentary to their environment and end-use. These features are fundamental to the burgeoning field of Soft Robotics, wherein flexible, compliant materials are used as the basis for the structure, actuation, sensing, and control of complete robotic systems. Combined with pressurized air as a power source, soft pneumatic actuator (SPA) based systems offers new and novel methods of exploiting the intrinsic compliance of soft material components in robotic systems. While this strategy seems to answer many of the needs for human-safe robotic applications, it also brings new questions and challenges: What are the needs and applications personal robots may best serve? Are soft pneumatic actuators capable of these tasks, or âusefulâ work output and performance? How can SPA based systems be applied to provide complex functionality needed for operation in diverse, real-world environments? What are the theoretical and practical challenges in implementing scalable, multiple degrees of freedom systems, and how can they be overcome? I present solutions to these problems in my thesis work, elucidated through scientific design, testing and evaluation of robotic prototypes which leverage and demonstrate three key features: 1) Intrinsic compliance: provided by passive elastic and flexible component material properties, 2) Extrinsic compliance: rendered through high number of independent, controllable degrees of freedom, and 3) Complementary design: exhibited by modular, plug and play architectures which combine both attributes to achieve compliant systems. Through these core projects and others listed below I have been engaged in soft robotic technology, its application, and solutions to the challenges which are critical to providing a path forward within the soft robotics field, as well as for the future of personal robotics as a whole toward creating a better society

    Design of an Anthropomorphic Robotic Hand for Space Operations

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    Robotic end-effectors provide the link between machines and the environment. The evolution of end-effector design has traded off between simplistic single-taskers and highly complex multi-function grippers. For future space operations, launch payload weight and the wide range of desired tasks necessitate a highly dexterous design with strength and manipulation capabilities matching those of the suited astronaut using EVA tools. The human hand provides the ideal parallel for a dexterous end-effector design. This thesis discusses efforts to design an anthropomorphic robotic hand, focusing on the detailed design, fabrication, and testing of an individual modular finger with considerations into overall hand configuration. The research first aims to define requirements for anthropomorphism and compare the geometry and motion of the design to that of the human hand. Active and passive ranges of motion are studied along with coupled joint behavior and grasp types. The second objective is to study the benefits and drawbacks of an active versus passive actuation systems. Tradeoffs between controllability and packaging of actuator assemblies are considered. Finally, a kinematic model is developed to predict tendon tensions and tip forces in different configurations. The esults show that the measured forces are consistent with the predictive model. In addition, the coupled joint motion shows similar behavior to that of the human hand

    Adaptive Multi-Functional Space Systems for Micro-Climate Control

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    This report summarizes the work done during the Adaptive Multifunctional Systems for Microclimate Control Study held at the Caltech Keck Institute for Space Studies (KISS) in 2014-2015. Dr. Marco Quadrelli (JPL), Dr. James Lyke (AFRL), and Prof. Sergio Pellegrino (Caltech) led the Study, which included two workshops: the first in May of 2014, and another in February of 2015. The Final Report of the Study presented here describes the potential relevance of adaptive multifunctional systems for microclimate control to the missions outlined in the 2010 NRC Decadal Survey. The objective of the Study was to adapt the most recent advances in multifunctional reconfigurable and adaptive structures to enable a microenvironment control to support space exploration in extreme environments (EE). The technical goal was to identify the most efficient materials, architectures, structures and means of deployment/reconfiguration, system autonomy and energy management solutions needed to optimally project/generate a micro-environment around space assets. For example, compact packed thin-layer reflective structures unfolding to large areas can reflect solar energy, warming and illuminating assets such as exploration rovers on Mars or human habitats on the Moon. This novel solution is called an energy-projecting multifunctional system (EPMFS), which are composed of Multifunctional Systems (MFS) and Energy-Projecting Systems (EPS)

    Geometric soft robotics: a finite element approach

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    Enabling remote semi-autonomous operations in hazardous environments is a challenging technological problem, given the difficulty to access in confined and constrained spaces using classical robotic systems. Inspired by biological trunks and tentacles, soft continuum robots constitute a possible solution to this problem, for their ability to traverse confined spaces, manipulate objects in complex environments, and conform their shape to nonlinear curvilinear paths. The need of reaching difficult-to-access industrial sites for maintenance and inspection procedures or anatomical sites for less invasive robotic surgery mainly motivates the current research. Despite the recent advances in the design and fabrication of soft robots, the community still suffers for the lack of a consolidate modeling framework for simulating their mechanical behavior. Such a modeling framework is the necessary condition for developing new physical design and control strategies, as well as path planning algorithms. Indeed, despite their appreciable features, soft robots usually generate undesired vibrations during normal procedures. This is one of the main reasons which still limits their potentially wide use in real scenario. Realistic modeling frameworks might leverage the development of model-based predictive controllers to compensate for the undesired vibrations, as well as design concepts and optimized trajectories to avoid the excitation of the vibration modes of the mechanical structure. The main objective of the thesis is to develop a unified mathematical framework for simulating the mechanical behavior of soft continuum robotic manipulators, which can also accommodate the dynamic simulation of classical rigid robots. The computer implementation of this theoretical framework leads to the development of SimSOFT, a physics engine for soft robots. The formulation has been validated through literature benchmark and some applications are presented. One of the major strengths of the framework is that it can accommodate the realistic simulation of kinematic trees or loops constituted either by rigid or soft arms connected by rigid or flexible joints.The simulation of hybrid mechanisms, composed by classical rigid kinematic chains and soft continuum manipulators, which can be used to have larger dexterity in smaller workspaces, as they are easily to miniaturize, is thus possible. To the best of the author's knowledge, the mathematical models developed in the thesis constitute the first attempt in the robotics community towards a unified framework for the dynamics of soft continuum multibody systems
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