4.6 Article

A Simple Free-Fold Test to Measure Bending Stiffness of Slender Soft Actuators

Journal

IEEE ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION LETTERS
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages 8702-8709

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/LRA.2021.3114960

Keywords

Bending; Actuators; Soft robotics; Electron tubes; Stress; Strain; Mathematical models; Soft robot applications; soft robot materials and design; soft sensors and actuators; medical robots and systems

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation (EFRI) C3 SoRo Program
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program [00039202]
  3. Institute for Engineering in Medicine (IEM)

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A reliable estimate for bending stiffness is crucial for predicting various aspects of soft robot performance. Current methods rely on accurate material knowledge, and measuring actuator stiffness can be costly and complex.
A reliable estimate for bending stiffness is critical to many soft robot models when predicting everything from robot-environment contact to buckling resistance. Current methods for predicting actuator bending stiffness rely on highly accurate knowledge of material characteristics, which are not trivial to obtain for composite actuators. Additionally, current models for fluidic actuators often depend on a pressure-independent bending stiffness despite pressure playing a non-negligible role in bending stiffness behavior. Methods to measure actuator stiffness often require costly instrumentation to measure or perturb the motions and forces required to measure actual bending stiffness. We introduce a simple free-fold test to empirically estimate the bending stiffness of slender soft actuators-pressurized or unpressurized and composite or homogeneous-which requires the measurement of one distance from a single image of a specific robot pose. The resulting model also shows that the change in actuator weight per unit length can be used to determine the dependence of bending stiffness on actuation pressure.

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