Inside Science
/
Article

Meet Some Robots with a Softer Touch

MAR 13, 2019
Researchers embrace the wobbliness of soft materials to make squishy robots.
Meet Some Robots with a Softer Touch lead image

Meet Some Robots with a Softer Touch lead image

Katia Bertoldi, Harvard University

(Inside Science) -- When you think of robots you probably picture something made of cold hard metal, or maybe smooth plastic armor. But what about a soft robot with no gears or wires? Katia Bertoldi, an engineer at Harvard University, and her colleagues are all about building robots with squishy and soft materials. She shared some of the designs at a meeting of the American Physical Society last week in Boston.

Drawing inspiration from snakeskin, Bertoldi’s team built a special suit that turned a simple balloon into a moving robot. They applied cutting techniques from the Japanese art known as kirigami -- which they had learned from previous projects -- to give the suit scale-like skin that would flare open when stretched, and close again when relaxed.

Video courtesy of Katia Bertoldi, Harvard University

The repetitive flaring and closing of the scales created a motion that pulled the robot forward and was only possible using a soft material. In the past, these materials were usually avoided when designing robots because they are hard to control.

“Traditionally we design systems to avoid instabilities,” said Bertoldi. “But I’m convinced that instabilities are fun, and we can use them to advance the functionalities of certain systems.”

To further illustrate her point, Bertoldi shared another contraption made of soft chambers that can be expanded and contracted using fluidic pumps. It can be used as a simple motor when combined with other components such as legs and claws.

The chambers are made by nesting and sealing two rubber poppers of different sizes atop each other. When the poppers snap, the chambers flex in heartbeatlike pulses. In the future, Bertoldi said they will try using poppers with different stiffnesses as valvelike components that can selectively transfer energy along different channels connected by soft tubes.

These soft components are useful for making soft robotic systems, which in the future may replace their current hard counterparts one by one, making future robots more flexible.

More Science News
FYI
/
Article
AIP
/
Article
/
Article
Using principles of superposition and entanglement, researchers develop a framework to tailor a patient’s cancer treatment to their entire molecular background.
/
Article
Stackable cartridge-like device foregoes complex pumps and tubing by providing fluid flow with a hydrogel-based flow resistor that generates passive pressure gradients.
/
Article
There are tens to hundreds of billions of photons in a single firefly flash, a number that has historically been overestimated.
/
Article
The protein’s electrostatic field is the most important factor in the intensity of its light emission.
/
Article
/
Article
Nuclear winter, climate change, bioterrorism, AI. Those and other threats are growing in potential impact. What can we do?
/
Article
The specialized devices are democratizing access to cosmic-ray experiments.
/
Article
Europe’s particle physicists choose a 91 km electron–positron collider as the next global flagship project.
/
Article
The seasoned high school physics teacher challenges students to engage in an increasingly distracted world.