Abstract

Soft robotics, characterized by structural compliance, offers advantages when handling fragile objects and interacting with humans. Modeling the mechanical behavior of soft robots, however, is often overlooked in previous studies due to the difficulty of capturing their nonlinear deformation. In this work, we present a highly efficient predictor for pneumatic actuation utilizing a combination of data-driven surrogate modeling and physics-based optimization. This hybrid methodology explicitly captures the nonlinear mechanics of pneumatic components, which greatly accelerates the searching of static equilibrium, and thus help elucidate how the overall grasping system will interact with the environment. We have additively manufactured and tested a robotic device on various objects. Results show that our model can predict pneumatic actuation very closely matching to that of the experiments with orders of magnitude faster computational speed than traditional numerical simulations. Moreover, the proposed framework can be extended to model various soft robotic devices with nonlinear actuation components.

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