Soft Robotics: Review of Fluid‐Driven Intrinsically Soft Devices; Manufacturing, Sensing, Control, and Applications in Human‐Robot Interaction
Arizona State University · University of Colorado Boulder · +9 more institutions
Abstract
The emerging field of soft robotics makes use of many classes of materials including metals, low glass transition temperature (Tg) plastics, and high Tg elastomers. Dependent on the specific design, all of these materials may result in extrinsically soft robots. Organic elastomers, however, have elastic moduli ranging from tens of megapascals down to kilopascals; robots composed of such materials are intrinsically soft − they are always compliant independent of their shape. This class of soft machines has been used to reduce control complexity and manufacturing cost of robots, while enabling sophisticated and novel functionalities often in direct contact with humans. This review focuses on a particular type of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 41.98
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 191
Authors
9- PPPanagiotis Polygerinos
Arizona State University
- NCNikolaus Correll
University of Colorado Boulder, University of Colorado System
- SAStephen A. Morin
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
- BMBobak Mosadegh
NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital, Cornell University, New York Hospital Queens, Presbyterian Hospital
- ÇDÇağdaş D. Önal
Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Topics & keywords
- Soft robotics
- Elastomer
- Robot
- Soft materials
- Robotics
- Materials science
- Fluidics
- Nanotechnology