Enabling soft robotic systems : new solutions to stiffness tuning, sensing, and actuation control
Soft robots have appealing advantages of being highly flexible and adaptable to complex environments. This dissertation is focused on advancing key enabling elements for soft robots, including providing new solutions to stiffness-tuning, integrated sensing, and modeling and control of soft actuation materials.First, a compact and cost-effective mechanism for stiffness-tuning is proposed based on a 3D-printed conductive polylactic acid (CPLA) material. The conductive nature of the CPLA allows convenient control of temperature and stiffness via Joule heating in a reversible manner. A gripper composed of two soft actuators as fingers is fabricated to demonstrate localized gripping posture, passive shape holding, and the ability to carry load in a desired locked configuration.Second, two types of integrated sensors are proposed. The first type is 3D-printed strain sensors that can be co-fabricated with soft robot bodies. Three commercially available conductive filaments are explored, among which the conductive thermoplastic polyurethane (ETPU) filament shows the highest sensitivity (gauge factor of 20) and working strain range of 0%-12.5%. The ETPU strain sensor exhibits an interesting behavior where the conductivity increases with the strain. In addition, the resistance change of the ETPU sensor in a doubly-clamped configuration in response to a wind stimulus is characterized, and the sensor shows sensitivity to wind velocity beyond 3.5 m/s.We then present a soft pressure-mapping sensing system that is lightweight and low-cost, and can be integrated with inflatable or textile structures with minimal impact on the original substrate characteristics. The sensing system involves two layers of piezoresistive foil and three layers of conductive copper sheets, stacked on top of each other in an orderly manner, to detect the magnitude and the location of applied load, respectively. Extensive experiments on a sensor prototype with dimensions of 35x500 mm mounted on an inflatable tube are conducted to demonstrate the capability of the proposed scheme in simultaneous measurement of deformation location and magnitude. In particular, it is shown that the specific design approach minimizes the coupling of location and magnitude measurements, resulting in minimal complexity for data processing.Finally, we investigate the modeling and control of soft actuation materials, specifically accommodating their nonlinear dynamics. Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) gel actuators are considered in this work. A nonlinear, control-oriented Hammerstein model, with a polynomial nonlinearity preceding a transfer function, is proposed to capture the amplitude and bias-dependent frequency response of PVC gel actuators. A trajectory-tracking controller is developed, where an inverse is used to cancel the effect of the nonlinearity and a disturbance estimator/compensator is adopted to mitigate the influence of model uncertainties and disturbances. The efficacy of the proposed modeling and control approach is demonstrated experimentally in comparison with alternative methods, where the PVC actuator is commanded to track references of varying frequencies and waveforms.
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- In Collections
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Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Copyright Status
- In Copyright
- Material Type
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Theses
- Authors
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Al-Rubaiai, Mohammed
- Thesis Advisors
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Tan, Xiaobo
- Committee Members
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Gao, Tong
Li, Wen
Sepulveda Alancastro, Nelson
- Date
- 2021
- Subjects
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Electrical engineering
- Program of Study
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Electrical Engineering - Doctor of Philosophy
- Degree Level
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Doctoral
- Language
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English
- Pages
- 119 pages
- ISBN
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9798759990536
- Permalink
- https://doi.org/doi:10.25335/s9vz-yt63