4.6 Article

DelTact: A Vision-Based Tactile Sensor Using a Dense Color Pattern

Journal

IEEE ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION LETTERS
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 10778-10785

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/LRA.2022.3196141

Keywords

Force and tactile sensing; perception for grasping and manipulation; soft sensors and actuators

Categories

Funding

  1. Hong Kong Innovation and Technology Fund (ITF) [ITS/036/21FP]
  2. Project of Hetao Shenzhen-Hong Kong Science and Technology Innovation Cooperation Zone [HZQB-KCZYB-2020083]
  3. Research Grants Council of Hong Kong [16200919, 16203321]
  4. Foshan HKUST Projects, Government of Foshan Municipal City [FSUST20-SHCIRI11F]

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This paper proposes a new design of a vision-based tactile sensor, DelTact, which achieves high accuracy and low error in contact deformation tracking through optimizing color pattern generation and optical flow algorithm. Experimental results demonstrate that the sensor has low error and high frequency characteristics.
Tactile sensing is an essential perception for robots to complete dexterous tasks. As a promising tactile sensing technique, vision-based tactile sensors have been developed to improve robot performance in manipulation and grasping. Here we propose a new design of a vision-based tactile sensor, DelTact. The sensor uses a modular hardware architecture for compactness whilst maintaining a contact measurement of full resolution (798 x 586) and large area (675 mm(2)). Moreover, it adopts an improved dense random color pattern based on the previous version to achieve high accuracy of contact deformation tracking. In particular, we optimize the color pattern generation process and select the appropriate pattern for coordinating with a dense optical flow algorithm under a real-world experimental sensory setting. The optical flow obtained from the raw image is processed to determine shape and force distribution on the contact surface. We also demonstrate the method to extract contact shape and force distribution from the raw images. Experimental results demonstrate that the sensor is capable of providing tactile measurements with low error and high frequency (40 Hz).

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