4.8 Article

Electro-pneumatic pumps for soft robotics

Journal

SCIENCE ROBOTICS
Volume 6, Issue 51, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.abc3721

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Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/L015293/1, EP/S026096/1, EP/M020460/1, EP/R02961X/1]
  2. Royal Academy of Engineering
  3. Office of the Chief Science Adviser for National Security under the UK Intelligence Community Postdoctoral Fellowship Programme
  4. Royal Academy of Engineering through the Chair in Emerging Technologies scheme
  5. Royal Society - ERA Foundation Translation Award [TA\R1\170060]
  6. EPSRC [EP/M020460/1, EP/M026388/1, EP/S026096/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The study introduces a lightweight, flexible electro-pneumatic pump (EPP) that provides portable, local energy for soft robots, overcoming the limitations of existing pneumatic power sources. Experimental results show that the EPP has high pressure and volumetric flow rates, and can drive various physical devices of soft robots.
Soft robotics has applications in myriad fields from assistive wearables to autonomous exploration. Now, the portability and the performance of many devices are limited by their associated pneumatic energy source, requiring either large, heavy pressure vessels or noisy, inefficient air pumps. Here, we present a lightweight, flexible, electro-pneumatic pump (EPP), which can silently control volume and pressure, enabling portable, local energy provision for soft robots, overcoming the limitations of existing pneumatic power sources. The EPP is actuated using dielectric fluid-amplified electrostatic zipping, and the device presented here can exert pressures up to 2.34 kilopascals and deliver volumetric flow rates up to 161 milliliters per second and under 0.5 watts of power, despite only having a thickness of 1.1 millimeters and weight of 5.3 grams. An EPP was able to drive a typical soft robotic actuator to achieve a maximum contraction change of 32.40% and actuation velocity of 54.43% per second. We highlight the versatility of this technology by presenting three EPP-driven embodiments: an antagonistic mechanism, an arm-flexing wearable robotic device, and a continuous-pumping system. This work shows the wide applicability of the EPP to enable advanced wearable assistive devices and lightweight, mobile, multifunctional robots.

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