Abstract

Soft robotic manipulators with fluidic actuation are devices with easily deformable structures that comprise a set of chambers that can be pressurized to achieve structural deflection. These devices have experienced a rapid development in recent years, which is not least due to the advantages they offer in terms of robustness, affordability, and compliance. Nowadays, however, soft robotic manipulators are designed mostly by intuition, which complicates design improvement and hampers the advancement of the field. In this article, a general study of the design of soft robotic manipulators with fluidic actuation is presented using an analytical derivation. The study relies on a novel approach that is applicable to a general design and thus provides a common framework for the design of soft robots. In the study, two design layouts of interest are first justified, which correspond to extending and contracting devices. Design principles for each of the layouts are subsequently derived, both for planar and 3D scenarios, and considering operation to support any external loading and to provide any desired deflection. These principles are found to agree with the main design trends in the literature, although they also highlight the potential for improvement in specific aspects of the design geometry and stiffness distribution. The principles are used to identify the most suitable design for both extending and contracting devices in 2D and 3D and extract insight into their behavior. To showcase the use of these design principles, a prototypical scenario in minimally invasive surgery requiring a manipulator segment capable of bending in any direction is defined, where the objective is to maximize its lateral force. The principles are applied to determine the most suitable design. These also highlight the need for numerical analysis to optimize two design parameters. Finite element simulations are developed, and their results are reported. Among the most relevant is the fact that the cross-sectional area with pressurized fluid should be maximized and that the stiffness in the design should be selected to minimize structural stretching. The simulations yield the optimal design, which offers higher force than existing, reference ones. The simulations also provide verification for the study.

Highlights

  • Soft robots are commonly defined as devices composed of low-stiffness materials,[1] which are frequently used to achieve significant structural deformations and displacements

  • The design of contracting devices in 3D presented elucidates that contracting devices are similar to a segment of continuum robot actuated by pneumatic artificial muscles (PAMs) and with an elastic backbone, such as Ref.[30]

  • The performance is evaluated by measuring the normal force applied onto a prismatic block positioned, as shown in Figure 11, with frictionless contact. This corresponds to an approximate deflection near 20° of the manipulator at initial contact and an interaction that is normal to the rigid block and approximately lateral on the soft robotic manipulator

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Summary

Introduction

Soft robots are commonly defined as devices composed of low-stiffness materials,[1] which are frequently used to achieve significant structural deformations and displacements. Soft robots with fluidic actuation are generally used as manipulators,[7] as limbs for locomotion,[8] or as actuators in more complex systems such as rehabilitation or assistive devices.[9,10]. The majority of these applications require the soft robot to provide a controlled motion between two points of interest in a solid structure while supporting external forces and moments.

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