Multimodal Soft Robotic Actuation and Locomotion

Author:

Yao Dickson R.1,Kim Inho1,Yin Shukun1,Gao Wei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Andrew and Peggy Cherng Department of Medical Engineering Division of Engineering and Applied Science California Institute of Technology Pasadena CA 91125 USA

Abstract

AbstractDiverse and adaptable modes of complex motion observed at different scales in living creatures are challenging to reproduce in robotic systems. Achieving dexterous movement in conventional robots can be difficult due to the many limitations of applying rigid materials. Robots based on soft materials are inherently deformable, compliant, adaptable, and adjustable, making soft robotics conducive to creating machines with complicated actuation and motion gaits. This review examines the mechanisms and modalities of actuation deformation in materials that respond to various stimuli. Then, strategies based on composite materials are considered to build toward actuators that combine multiple actuation modes for sophisticated movements. Examples across literature illustrate the development of soft actuators as free‐moving, entirely soft‐bodied robots with multiple locomotion gaits via careful manipulation of external stimuli. The review further highlights how the application of soft functional materials into robots with rigid components further enhances their locomotive abilities. Finally, taking advantage of the shape‐morphing properties of soft materials, reconfigurable soft robots have shown the capacity for adaptive gaits that enable transition across environments with different locomotive modes for optimal efficiency. Overall, soft materials enable varied multimodal motion in actuators and robots, positioning soft robotics to make real‐world applications for intricate and challenging tasks.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Heritage Medical Research Institute

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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