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Grasping With a Soft Glove: Intrinsic Impedance Control in Pneumatic Actuators

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2017-03

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The Royal Society
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Paoletti, P., G.W. Jones, and L. Mahadevan. 2017. Grasping with a Soft Glove: Intrinsic Impedance Control in Pneumatic Actuators. Journal of the Royal Society Interface 14, no. 128: 20160867-20160867.

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Abstract

The interaction of a robotic manipulator with unknown soft objects represents a significant challenge for traditional robotic platforms because of the difficulty in controlling the grasping force between a soft object and a stiff manipulator. Soft robotic actuators inspired by elephant trunks, octopus limbs and muscular hydrostats are suggestive of ways to overcome this fundamental difficulty. In particular, the large intrinsic compliance of soft manipulators such as ‘pneu-nets’—pneumatically actuated elastomeric structures—makes them ideal for applications that require interactions with an uncertain mechanical and geometrical environment. Using a simple theoretical model, we show how the geometric and material nonlinearities inherent in the passive mechanical response of such devices can be used to grasp soft objects using force control, and stiff objects using position control, without any need for active sensing or feedback control. Our study is suggestive of a general principle for designing actuators with autonomous intrinsic impedance control.

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Biotechnology, Biophysics, Biochemistry, Bioengineering, Biomaterials, Biomedical Engineering

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