Abstract
In recent years, a clear trend toward simplification emerged in the development of robotic hands. The use of soft robotic approaches has been a useful tool in this prospective, enabling complexity reduction by embodying part of grasping intelligence in the hand mechanical structure. Several hand prototypes designed according to such principles have accomplished good results in terms of grasping simplicity, robustness, and reliability. Among them, the Pisa/IIT SoftHand demonstrated the feasibility of a large variety of grasping tasks, by means of only one actuator and an opportunely designed tendon-driven differential mechanism. However, the use of a single degree of actuation prevents the execution of more complex tasks, like fine preshaping of fingers and in-hand manipulation. While possible in theory, simply doubling the Pisa/IIT SoftHand actuation system has several disadvantages, e.g., in terms of space and mechanical complexity. To overcome these limitations, we propose a novel design framework for tendon-driven mechanisms, in which the main idea is to turn transmission friction from a disturbance into a design tool. In this way, the degrees of actuation (DoAs) can be doubled with little additional complexity. By leveraging on this idea, we design a novel robotic hand, the Pisa/IIT SoftHand 2. We present here its design, modeling, control, and experimental validation. The hand demonstrates that by opportunely combining only two DoAs with hand softness, a large variety of grasping and manipulation tasks can be performed, only relying on the intelligence embodied in the mechanism. Examples include rotating objects with different shapes, opening a jar, and pouring coffee from a glass.
Highlights
N OTWITHSTANDING the many advances, designing dexterous robotic hands remains one of the biggest challenges in robotics
Its application brought to the development of Pisa/IIT SoftHand [19] [see Fig. 3(a)], an anthropomorphic robotic hand implementing one soft synergy
We present the design and validation of a novel self-contained robotic hand, named Pisa/IIT SoftHand 2
Summary
N OTWITHSTANDING the many advances, designing dexterous robotic hands remains one of the biggest challenges in robotics. One of the most effective and widely used tools for mechanical simplification is underactuation [8], by which designers can reduce the number of degrees of actuation (DoAs) of robotic hands while maintaining a large number of degrees of freedom (DoFs) Notable examples of this line of research are [9]–[13]. Its application brought to the development of Pisa/IIT SoftHand [19] [see Fig. 3(a)], an anthropomorphic robotic hand implementing one soft synergy. The present paper extends [24], where the proposed actuation principle was preliminarily introduced and implemented in an exploratory prototype
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