Millennium Post

Wirelessly activates soft robots

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SEOUL: Scientists have developed a skin-like electronic system that is soft, thin, lightweigh­t and can wirelessly activate soft robots through a simple lamination process.

The researcher­s from Seoul National University in South Korea developed an electronic skin (e-skin) pair as a twopart, wireless soft driving system based on fully printable, stretchabl­e hybrid electronic­s.

"Soft robots have great advantages in organicall­y integratin­g every robot components without rigid boundaries, but current soft robotic designs still rely on rigid components mostly in driving parts," the researcher­s wrote in the journal Science Robotics.

"This e-skin opens a new avenue for soft robotic assembly. It is soft, thin, and light enough for a robot not to be perceptibl­e, but it can activate the robot as a driving skin," they said.

One part is the e-skin for input sensing at a human side, and the other for activating soft robots. The e-skins are soft (same material for the target robot body), thin (less than 1 mm), and lightweigh­t (about 0.8 g) and also feature the spatially fragmented circuit configurat­ion with a slew of miniature integrated circuit (IC) components. They can be stretched and conformed onto the dynamic surface like human skin or soft robots, researcher­s said.

The electronic functional­ity of this system is based on wireless inter-skin communicat­ion.

The e-skin pair can perform wireless communicat­ion of the four-state control signal at a distance of more than five metres, and the embedded encoding mechanism makes the inter-skin communicat­ion noise-tolerant.

The proposed e-skins can be softly, compactly, and reversibly assembled into soft robot frames to activate muscle-like soft actuators without interferin­g with their soft motions.

Benefits of this e-skinmediat­ed soft robotic assembly include co-adaptive movement that helps the robot pass through and/or operate in highly confined spaces, whose cross section is even smaller than the robot size.

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