The robot is made of segments that can
fold into a flat disk and extend into a cylinder. Partial folds bend the robot
and allow for motion and steering. Credit: Frank Wojciechowski/Princeton
University
Engineers
at Princeton and North Carolina State University have combined ancient
paper-folding and modern materials science to create a soft robot that bends
and twists through mazes with ease.
Soft robots can be challenging to guide
because steering equipment often increases the robot's rigidity and cuts its
flexibility. The new design overcomes those problems by building the steering
system directly into the robot's body, said Tuo Zhao, a postdoctoral researcher
at Princeton.
In an article, titled "Modular
Multi-degree-of-freedom Soft Origami Robots with Reprogrammable Electrothermal
Actuation" published May 6 in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers describe how they
created the robot out of modular, cylindrical segments. The segments, which can
operate independently or join to form a longer unit, all contribute to the
robot's ability to move and steer. The new system allows the flexible robot to
crawl forward and reverse, pick up cargo and assemble into longer formations.
"The concept of modular soft robots can provide insight into future soft robots that can grow, repair, and develop new functions," the authors write in their article.
The soft robot can separate and reassemble, and
it can crawl through twisting spaces. Credit: Princeton University
Zhao said the robot's ability to
assemble and split up on the move allows the system to work as a single robot
or a swarm.
"Each segment can be an
individual unit, and they can communicate with each other and assemble on
command," he said. "They can separate easily, and we use magnets to
connect them."
Zhao works in Glaucio Paulino's lab
in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Princeton
Materials Institute. Paulino, the Margareta Engman Augustine Professor of
Engineering, has created a body of research that applies origami to a wide
array of engineering applications from medical devices to aerospace and
construction.
"We have created a
bio-inspired plug-and-play soft modular origami robot enabled by electrothermal
actuation with highly bendable and adaptable heaters," Paulino said.
"This is a very promising technology with potential translation to robots
that can grow, heal, and adapt on demand."
In this case, the researchers began
by building their robot out of cylindrical segments featuring an origami form
called a Kresling pattern. The pattern allows each segment to twist into a
flattened disk and expand back into a cylinder. This twisting, expanding motion
is the basis for the robot's ability to crawl and change direction. By
partially folding a section of the cylinder, the researchers can introduce a
lateral bend in a robot segment. By combining small bends, the robot changes
direction as it moves forward.
One of the most challenging aspects
of the work involved developing a mechanism to control the bending and folding
motions used to drive and steer the robot. Researchers at North Carolina State
University developed the solution. They used two materials that shrink or
expand differently when heated (liquid crystal elastomer and polyimide) and
combined them into thin strips along the creases of the Kresling pattern.
The researchers also installed a
thin stretchable heater made of silver nanowire network along each fold.
Electrical current on the nanowire heater heats the control strips, and the two
materials' different expansion introduces a fold in the strip. By calibrating
the current, and the material used in the control strips, the researchers can
precisely control the folding and bending to drive the robot's movement and
steering.
"Silver nanowire is an
excellent material to fabricate stretchable conductors. Stretchable conductors
are building blocks for a variety of stretchable electronic devices including
stretchable heaters. Here we used the stretchable heater as the actuation
mechanism for the bending and folding motions," said Yong Zhu, the Andrew
A. Adams Distinguished Professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering at N.C. State and one of the lead researchers.
Shuang Wu, a postdoctoral
researcher in Zhu's lab, said the lab's previous work used the stretchable
heater for continuously bending a bilayer structure. "In this work we
achieved localized, sharp folding to actuate the origami pattern. This effective
actuation method can be generally applied to origami structures (with creases)
for soft robotics," Wu said.
The
researchers said that the current version of the robot has limited speed, and
they are working to increase the locomotion in later generations.
Zhao said the researchers also plan to experiment with different shapes, patterns, and instability to improve both the speed and the steering.
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