4.4 Article

Fabrication and characterization of bending and pressure sensors for a soft prosthetic hand

Journal

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6439/aaa1d8

Keywords

soft robotics; conductive elastomer; sensing; robotic hand

Funding

  1. Portuguese Foundation of Science and Technology
  2. CMU-Portugal program [CMUP-ERI/TIC/0021/2014]

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We demonstrate fabrication, characterization, and implementation of 'soft-matter' pressure and bending sensors for a soft robotic hand. The elastomer-based sensors are embedded in a robot finger composed of a 3D printed endoskeleton and covered by an elastomeric skin. Two types of sensors are evaluated, resistive pressure sensors and capacitive pressure sensors. The sensor is fabricated entirely out of insulating and conductive rubber, the latter composed of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) elastomer embedded with a percolating network of structured carbon black (CB). The sensor-integrated fingers have a simple materials architecture, can be fabricated with standard rapid prototyping methods, and are inexpensive to produce. When incorporated into a robotic hand, the CB-PDMS sensors and PDMS carrier medium function as an 'artificial skin' for touch and bend detection. Results show improved response with a capacitive sensor architecture, which, unlike a resistive sensor, is robust to electromechanical hysteresis, creep, and drift in the CB-PDMS composite. The sensorized fingers are integrated in an anthropomorphic hand and results for a variety of grasping tasks are presented.

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