Shape Programmable and Multifunctional Soft Textile Muscles for Wearable and Soft Robotics

Author:

Hoang Trung Thien1,Nguyen Chi Cong1,Phan Phuoc Thien1,Davies James1,Tran Hien Anh1,Thai Mai Thanh2,Truong Vi Khanh3,Nguyen Tuan‐Khoa4,Vo‐Doan Tat Thang5,Phan Hoang‐Phuong6,Lovell Nigel Hamilton1,Do Thanh Nho1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering Faculty of Engineering Tyree Institute of Health Engineering (IHealthE) UNSW Sydney New South Wales 2052 Australia

2. College of Engineering and Computer Science VinUniversity Hanoi 100000 Vietnam

3. Biomedical Nanoengineering Laboratory College of Medicine and Public Health Flinders University Adelaide South Australia 5042 Australia

4. Queensland Micro and Nanotechnology Centre Griffith University Brisbane Queensland 4111 Australia

5. School of Mechanical & Mining Engineering The University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland 4072 Australia

6. School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering Faculty of Engineering UNSW Sydney New South Wales 2052 Australia

Abstract

Textiles are promising candidates for use in soft robots and wearable devices due to their inherent compliance, high versatility, and skin comfort. Planar fluidic textile‐based actuators exhibit low profile and high conformability, and can seamlessly integrate additional components (e.g., soft sensors or variable stiffness structures [VSSs]) to create advanced, multifunctional smart textile actuators. In this article, a new class of programmable, fluidic soft textile muscles (STMs) that incorporate multilayered silicone sheets with embedded fluidic channels is introduced. The STMs are scalable and fabricated by apparel engineering techniques, offering a fabrication approach able to create large‐scaled multilayered structures that can be challenging for current microfluidic bonding methods. They are also highly automation compatible due to no manual insertion of elastic tubes/bladders into textile structures. Liquid metal is employed for creating fluidic channels. It is not only used for actuation but also used as channels for additional features such as soft piezoresistive sensors with enhanced sensitivity to STMs’ pressure‐induced elongation, or VSSs of either low‐melting‐point alloys or a new thermo‐responsive epoxy with low viscosity and transition temperature. The STMs hold promising prospects for soft robotic and wearable applications, which is demonstrated by an example of a textile‐based wearable 3D skin‐stretch haptic interface.

Funder

National Heart Foundation of Australia

Publisher

Wiley

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