Abstract
On the landscape of solutions to deal with delicate objects, the development and use of soft grippers is a topic of increasing interest, with a large number of prototypes proposed by the research community employing non-linear soft materials and based on diverse actuation means. However, increasing compliance usually leads to the reduction of lifting capacity. As a recent promising approach, shear forces exerted by a soft gripper can be enhanced by exploiting the electro-adhesion (EA) effect. Following this research trend, this paper proposes a new gripper that combines a compliant finger structure, with geometry taken from the FESTO FinRay but made of a softer material (a urethane rubber), and custom EA pads that are placed on the fingers at the interface with the grasped object. Following hyper-elastic model identification of the considered material and preliminary functional verification of gripper design via finite element simulations, the gripper is then manufactured and tested by means of a specific setup, replicating the grasping and lifting of cylindrical objects with different diameters. The results clearly show that the new gripper makes it possible to generate holding forces similar to those of the FESTO FinRay, but with significantly lower pressures on the grasped object (77 % less). Besides enabling the handling of more fragile items, the drastic increase in gripper compliance also results in lower mechanical actuation force (namely, 71 % less of gripping energy) required to generate the same holding force, with a consequent reduction of operation costs and sustainability of its application.
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