4.8 Article

Reversible Underwater Adhesion for Soft Robotic Feet by Leveraging Electrochemically Tunable Liquid Metal Interfaces

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 31, Pages 37904-37914

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c09776

Keywords

tunable interfaces; liquid metal; EGaIn; crawling robots; soft robotics

Funding

  1. Royal Society, U.K. [IEC\NSFC\201223]

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A team of researchers has developed liquid metal smart feet (LMSF) that allow versatile actuation of soft crawling robots on wet slippery surfaces. By adjusting the liquid metal interface, the robots can move along arbitrary directions, demonstrating the versatility and reliability of the technology.
Soft crawling robots have potential applications for surveillance, rescue, and detection in complex environments. Despite this, most existing soft crawling robots either use nonadjustable feet to passively induce asymmetry in friction to actuate or are only capable of moving on surfaces with specific designs. Thus, robots often lack the ability to move along arbitrary directions in a two-dimensional (2D) plane or in unpredictable environments such as wet surfaces. Here, leveraging the electro-chemically tunable interfaces of liquid metal, we report the development of liquid metal smart feet (LMSF) that enable electrical control of friction for achieving versatile actuation of prismatic crawling robots on wet slippery surfaces. The functionality of the LMSF is examined on crawling robots with soft or rigid actuators. Parameters that affect the performance of the LMSF are investigated. The robots with the LMSF prove capable of actuating across different surfaces in various solutions. Demonstration of 2D locomotion of crawling robots along arbitrary directions validates the versatility and reliability of the LMSF, suggesting broad utility in the development of advanced soft robotic systems.

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