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Case study of a rapid prototyping method for optimizing soft gripper structures with integrated piezoresistive sensors

Book Contribution - Book Chapter Conference Contribution

Abstract:

Closed-loop control systems and monitoring the activities of soft robots in the natural environment require sensing elements in soft actuator modules. In this study, additive manufacturing is used for sensorized soft actuator modules to investigate the influence of the Shore hardness and design aspects of an open-source tendon-based gripper structure, in a time-efficient way. Additionally, the placement of the piezoresistive sensing element (tension or compression side on the bending soft gripper) was investigated. A user-friendly method, based on thermoplastic material extrusion, has been explored to improve the future design optimization in of active soft robotic structures successfully. A higher Shore hardness resulted in a higher total deflection and a higher force to bend the gripper structure. By increasing the geometrical stiffness of the gripper printed with low Shore hardness, the total deflection was increased, but the force needed to activate the movement was higher in comparison to high Shore hardness and low geometrical stiffness. Moreover, the sensing element on the substrate of higher Shore hardness, leads to low drift, monotonic response, with good sensitivity, independent of the sampling rate. The gripper of higher Shore hardness had a larger functional range, being capable of gripping small and larger objects.

Book: 2022 IEEE 5th International Conference on Soft Robotics, RoboSoft 2022
Series: 2022 IEEE 5th International Conference on Soft Robotics, RoboSoft 2022
Pages: 539-544
Number of pages: 6
Publication year:2022
Accessibility:Closed