Abstract

Increasing amounts of attention are being paid to the study of Soft Sensors and Soft Systems. Soft Robotic Systems require input from advances in the field of Soft Sensors. Soft sensors can help a soft robot to perceive and to act upon its immediate environment. The concept of integrating sensing capabilities into soft robotic systems is becoming increasingly important. One challenge is that most of the existing soft sensors have a requirement to be hardwired to power supplies or external data processing equipment. This requirement hinders the ability of a system designer to integrate soft sensors into soft robotic systems. In this article, we design, fabricate, and characterize a new soft sensor, which benefits from a combination of radio-frequency identification (RFID) tag design and microfluidic sensor fabrication technologies. We designed this sensor using the working principle of an RFID transporter antenna, but one whose resonant frequency changes in response to an applied strain. This new microfluidic sensor is intrinsically stretchable and can be reversibly strained. This sensor is a passive and wireless device, and as such, it does not require a power supply and is capable of transporting data without a wired connection. This strain sensor is best understood as an RFID tag antenna; it shows a resonant frequency change from approximately 860 to 800 MHz upon an applied strain change from 0% to 50%. Within the operating frequency, the sensor shows a standoff reading range of >7.5 m (at the resonant frequency). We characterize, experimentally, the electrical performance and the reliability of the fabrication process. We demonstrate a pneumatic soft robot that has four microfluidic sensors embedded in four of its legs, and we describe the implementation circuit to show that we can obtain movement information from the soft robot using our wireless soft sensors.

Highlights

  • Soft sensorsSoft Sensors is an application-driven research field and has received much attention in recent decades

  • We design, fabricate, and characterize a new soft sensor, which benefits from a combination of radio-frequency identification (RFID) tag design and microfluidic sensor fabrication technologies

  • The sensor we present in this work consists of an RFID chip and a half-dipole antenna

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Summary

Introduction

Soft sensorsSoft Sensors is an application-driven research field and has received much attention in recent decades. A soft sensor is a measuring tool that is made of a single polymer or a mixture of soft polymers. These soft polymers are usually softer than the materials they interact with, which make them inherently safe. Electronic skin is called ‘‘second skin’’ referring to its softness; electronic skin is softer than human skin and makes it to an ideal substructure for sensor arrays.[1] A close relative of the field Soft Sensors is the field of Soft Robotics. One motivating factor for using Soft Robotics is the fact that the materials of the robots are softer than the environments with which they interact, and this compliance makes them ideal for applications involving human–robot interaction.[2,3,4]

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