Anchoring like octopus: biologically inspired soft artificial sucker

Author:

Sareh Sina1ORCID,Althoefer Kaspar2,Li Min3,Noh Yohan4,Tramacere Francesca5,Sareh Pooya6ORCID,Mazzolai Barbara5,Kovac Mirko6

Affiliation:

1. Design Robotics, School of Design, Royal College of Art, London, UK

2. Advanced Robotics @ Queen Mary (ARQ), Faculty of Science & Engineering, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK

3. Institute of Intelligent Measurement & Instrument, School of Mechanical Engineering, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an People's Republic of China

4. Centre for Robotics Research, Department of Informatics, King's College London, London, UK

5. Center for Micro-BioRobotics, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Pontedera, Italy

6. Aerial Robotics Laboratory, Department of Aeronautics, Imperial College London, London, UK

Abstract

This paper presents a robotic anchoring module, a sensorized mechanism for attachment to the environment that can be integrated into robots to enable or enhance various functions such as robot mobility, remaining on location or its ability to manipulate objects. The body of the anchoring module consists of two portions with a mechanical stiffness transition from hard to soft. The hard portion is capable of containing vacuum pressure used for actuation while the soft portion is highly conformable to create a seal to contact surfaces. The module is integrated with a single sensory unit which exploits a fibre-optic sensing principle to seamlessly measure proximity and tactile information for use in robot motion planning as well as measuring the state of firmness of its anchor. In an experiment, a variable set of physical loads representing the weights of potential robot bodies were attached to the module and its ability to maintain the anchor was quantified under constant and variable vacuum pressure signals. The experiment shows the effectiveness of the module in quantifying the state of firmness of the anchor and discriminating between different amounts of physical loads attached to it. The proposed anchoring module can enable many industrial and medical applications where attachment to environment is of crucial importance for robot control.

Funder

FP7

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Biochemistry,Biomaterials,Bioengineering,Biophysics,Biotechnology

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