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1.
Heliyon ; 10(5): e26943, 2024 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38449639

RESUMEN

The 21st century information and communication industries have played the pivotal role of bio-sensing technologies, refining privacy policies for human performance, facilitating scientific innovation, shaping e-governance, and reinforcing public confidence using nanotechnology. Human body is a thermodynamic heat engine in providing effective mechanical work as a function of psyche, conventional fuel transformation into enriched protein meal, and balancing of work-life fulcrum. The triboelectric effect of rubbing surfaces, interfaces, and interphases is invincible from the large field of the planet to nanodomains.

2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 16(8): 10931-10941, 2024 Feb 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38377555

RESUMEN

The fluid nature of liquid metals combined with their ability to form a solid native oxide skin enables them to be patterned in ways that would be challenging for solid metals. The present work shows a unique way of patterning liquid metals by injecting liquid metals into a mold. The mold contains a nonstick coating that enables the removal of the mold, thereby leaving just the liquid metal on the target substrate. This approach offers the simplicity and structural control of molding but without having the mold become part of the device. Thus, the metal can be encapsulated with very soft polymers that collapse if used as microchannels. The same mold can be used multiple times for high-volume patterning of liquid metal. The injection molding method is rapid and reliably produces structures with complex geometries on both flat and curved surfaces. We demonstrate the method by fabricating an elastomeric Joule heater and an electroadhesive soft gripper to show the potential of the method for soft and stretchable devices.

3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(25): 30956-30963, 2023 Jun 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37315182

RESUMEN

Electroadhesion is the modulation of adhesive forces through electrostatic interactions and has potential applications in a number of next-generation technologies. Recent efforts have focused on using electroadhesion in soft robotics, haptics, and biointerfaces that often involve compliant materials and nonplanar geometries. Current models for electroadhesion provide limited insight on other contributions that are known to influence adhesion performance, such as geometry and material properties. This study presents a fracture mechanics framework for understanding electroadhesion that incorporates geometric and electrostatic contributions for soft electroadhesives. We demonstrate the validity of this model with two material systems that exhibit disparate electroadhesive mechanisms, indicating that this formalism is applicable to a variety of electroadhesives. The results show the importance of material compliance and geometric confinement in enhancing electroadhesive performance and providing structure-property relationships for designing electroadhesive devices.

4.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36762969

RESUMEN

Direct writing of one-dimensional nanomaterials with large aspect ratios into customized, highly conductive, and high-resolution patterns is a challenging task. In this work, thin silver nanowires (AgNWs) with a length-to-diameter ratio of 730 are employed as a representative example to demonstrate a potent direct ink writing (DIW) strategy, in which aqueous inks using a natural polymer, sodium alginate, as the thickening agent can be easily patterned with arbitrary geometries and controllable structural features on a variety of planar substrates. With the aid of a quick spray-and-dry postprinting treatment at room temperature, the electrical conductivity and substrate adhesion of the written AgNWs-patterns improve simultaneously. This simple, environment benign, and low-temperature DIW strategy is effective for depositing AgNWs into patterns that are high-resolution (with line width down to 50 µm), highly conductive (up to 1.26 × 105 S/cm), and mechanically robust and have a large alignment order of NWs, regardless of the substrate's hardness, smoothness, and hydrophilicity. Soft electroadhesion grippers utilizing as-manufactured interdigitated AgNWs-electrodes exhibit an increased shear adhesion force of up to 15.5 kPa at a driving voltage of 3 kV, indicating the strategy is very promising for the decentralized and customized manufacturing of soft electrodes for future soft electronics and robotics.

5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(49): e2215028119, 2022 12 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36442122

RESUMEN

The climbing microrobots have attracted growing attention due to their promising applications in exploration and monitoring of complex, unstructured environments. Soft climbing microrobots based on muscle-like actuators could offer excellent flexibility, adaptability, and mechanical robustness. Despite the remarkable progress in this area, the development of soft microrobots capable of climbing on flat/curved surfaces and transitioning between two different surfaces remains elusive, especially in open spaces. In this study, we address these challenges by developing voltage-driven soft small-scale actuators with customized 3D configurations and active stiffness adjusting. Combination of programmed strain distributions in liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs) and buckling-driven 3D assembly, guided by mechanics modeling, allows for voltage-driven, complex 3D-to-3D shape morphing (bending angle > 200°) at millimeter scales (from 1 to 10 mm), which is unachievable previously. These soft actuators enable development of morphable electroadhesive footpads that can conform to different curved surfaces and stiffness-variable smart joints that allow different locomotion gaits in a single microrobot. By integrating such morphable footpads and smart joints with a deformable body, we report a multigait, soft microrobot (length from 6 to 90 mm, and mass from 0.2 to 3 g) capable of climbing on surfaces with diverse shapes (e.g., flat plane, cylinder, wavy surface, wedge-shaped groove, and sphere) and transitioning between two distinct surfaces. We demonstrate that the microrobot could navigate from one surface to another, recording two corresponding ceilings when carrying an integrated microcamera. The developed soft microrobot can also flip over a barrier, survive extreme compression, and climb bamboo and leaf.


Asunto(s)
Elastómeros , Cristales Líquidos , Membrana Celular , Extremidades , Marcha
6.
Polymers (Basel) ; 14(21)2022 Oct 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36365463

RESUMEN

Electroadhesive grippers can be used to pick up a wide range of materials, and those with variable stiffness functionality can increase load capacity and strength. This paper proposes an electroadhesive gripper (VSEAF) with variable stiffness function and a simple construction based on low melting point alloys (LMPAs) with active form adaptation through pneumatic driving. Resistance wires provide active changing stiffness. For a case study, a three-fingered gripper was designed with three electroadhesive fingers of varied stiffness. It is envisaged that these electroadhesive grippers with variable stiffness would extend the preparation process and boost the use of electroadhesion in soft robot applications.

7.
Adv Mater ; 34(13): e2108820, 2022 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35102625

RESUMEN

Adjustable interfacial adhesion is of great significance in smart-hydrogel-related engineering fields. This study presents an electroadhesion strategy for universal and ultrastrong hydrogel bonding with electrically programmable strength. An ionic hydrogel containing lithium ions is designed to achieve hydrated-ion-diffusion-mediated interfacial adhesion, where external electric fields are employed to precisely control spatiotemporal dynamics of the ion diffusion across ionic adhesion region (IAR). The hydrogel can realize a universal, ultrastrong, efficient, tough, reversible, and environmentally tolerant electroadhesion to diverse hydrogels, whose peak adhesion strength and interfacial adhesion toughness are as high as 1.2 MPa and 3750 J m-2 , respectively. With a mechanoelectric coupling model, the dominant role of the hydrated ions in IAR played in the interfacial electroadhesion is further quantitatively revealed. The proposed strategy opens a door for developing high-performance adhesion hydrogels with electrically programmable functions, which are indispensable for various emerging fields like flexible electronics and soft robotics.

8.
Soft Robot ; 9(6): 1074-1082, 2022 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34890291

RESUMEN

Soft adhesion is capable of attaching and bonding to rough surfaces and gripping nonplanar materials. It is preferable for material handling applications where safe interactions with external environments and enhanced adaptability to changing conditions are required. Soft electroadhesion (EA) is an emerging controllable adhesion technology that is especially suited to soft adhesion applications, but is prone to contact peeling that causes unwanted de-adhesion and cannot lift heavy objects unless the lifting force is applied parallel to the surface. Variable stiffness electroadhesion (VSEA) can be used to overcome these issues. Here a VSEA solution is developed by integrating electrostatic layer jamming and soft EA into a monolithic electrically controllable structure. The VSEA pad can achieve rapid response (within 1 s) and significant stiffness change (2200%), resist over four times the peeling force under a weight of 70 g, and generate 24.2%, 34.8%, and 49.3% greater adhesive forces on flat, convex, and concave surfaces, respectively. The promising gripping performance of the VSEA gripper was demonstrated by lifting and moving curved and flat objects. The VSEA concept and solution shown in this work may pave the way for the ready integration of EA into soft robotic systems and promote the broad application of EA technologies.


Asunto(s)
Fuerza de la Mano , Fenómenos Mecánicos , Diseño de Equipo , Fuerza de la Mano/fisiología , Electricidad Estática
9.
Adv Mater ; 33(31): e2008337, 2021 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34173278

RESUMEN

With the ubiquity of touch screens and the commercialization of electroadhesion-based surface haptic devices, modeling tools that capture the multiphysical phenomena within the finger-device interface and their interaction are critical to design devices that achieve higher performance and reliability at lower cost. While electroadhesion has successfully demonstrated the capability to change tactile perception through friction modulation, the mechanism of electroadhesion in the finger-device interface is still unclear, partly due to the complex interfacial physics including contact deformation, capillary formation, electric field, and their complicated coupling effects that have not been addressed comprehensively. A multiphysics model is presented here to predict the friction force for finger-surface tactile interactions at the nanoscale. The nanoscopic multiphysical phenomena are coupled to study the impacts of nanotexture and surface energy in the touch interface. With macroscopic friction force measurements as verification, the model is further used to propose textures that have maximum electroadhesion effect and minimum sensitivity to relative humidity and user perspiration rate. This model can guide the performance improvement of future electroadhesion-based surface haptic devices and other touch-based human-machine interfaces.


Asunto(s)
Fricción , Interfaces Hápticas , Dedos , Humanos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Percepción del Tacto
10.
J R Soc Interface ; 18(176): 20200783, 2021 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33784888

RESUMEN

Electrovibration holds great potential for creating vivid and realistic haptic sensations on touchscreens. Ideally, a designer should be able to control what users feel independent of the number of fingers they use, the movements they make, and how hard they press. We sought to understand the perception and physics of such interactions by determining the smallest 125 Hz electrovibration voltage that 15 participants could reliably feel when performing four different touch interactions at two normal forces. The results proved for the first time that both finger motion and contact by a second finger significantly affect what the user feels. At a given voltage, a single moving finger experiences much larger fluctuating electrovibration forces than a single stationary finger, making electrovibration much easier to feel during interactions involving finger movement. Indeed, only about 30% of participants could detect the stimulus without motion. Part of this difference comes from the fact that relative motion greatly increases the electrical impedance between a finger and the screen, as shown via detailed measurements from one individual. By contrast, threshold-level electrovibration did not significantly affect the coefficient of kinetic friction in any conditions. These findings help lay the groundwork for delivering consistent haptic feedback via electrovibration.


Asunto(s)
Percepción del Tacto , Vibración , Adulto , Femenino , Dedos , Fricción , Humanos , Masculino , Movimiento (Física)
11.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 33(43)2021 Aug 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33601347

RESUMEN

We present a general theory of electroadhesion assuming layered materials with finite electric conductivity and an air gap resulting from interfacial surface roughness. The theory reduces to the results derived in Persson (2018J. Chem. Phys.148144701) in the appropriate limits. We present numerical results to illustrate the theory.

12.
Polymers (Basel) ; 14(1)2021 Dec 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35012051

RESUMEN

Electroadhesion is a phenomenon ruled by many characteristic intrinsic parameters. To achieve a good adhesion, efficient and durable, a particular attention must be provided to the adhesion forces between the involved parts. In addition to the size and geometry of electrodes, parameters of materials such as dielectric constant, breakdown electric field, and Young's modulus are key factors in the evaluation of electroadhesion efficiency for electrostrictive polymers and electroactive devices. By analyzing these material parameters, a method is proposed to justify the choice of polymer matrices that are fit to specific electroadhesion applications. Another purpose of this work aims to demonstrate a possibility of accurately measuring the electroadhesion force. This physical parameter has been usually estimated through equations instead, because of the complexity in setup implementation to achieve highly precise measure. Comparisons based on the parameters criterion reveal that besides the intrinsic properties of material, some other parameters relating to its physical phenomena (e.g., saturation of dipolar orientation under high electric field leads to decrease dielectric constant), or physical behavior of the system (i.e., surface roughness reduces the active electrode area) must be thoroughly considered. Experimental results pointed out that plasticized terpolymer leads boosted electroadhesion performance compared to the other counterparts, up to 100 times higher than conventional polymers. The developed materials show high potential in applications of active displacement control for electrostrictive actuation.

13.
Adv Mater ; 32(25): e2000600, 2020 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32419233

RESUMEN

Electroadhesion provides a simple route to rapidly and reversibly control adhesion using applied electric potentials, offering promise for a variety of applications including haptics and robotics. Current electroadhesives, however, suffer from key limitations associated with the use of high operating voltages (>kV) and corresponding failure due to dielectric breakdown. Here, a new type of electroadhesion based on heterojunctions between iono-elastomer of opposite polarity is demonstrated, which can be operated at potentials as low as ≈1 V. The large electric field developed across the molecular-scale ionic double layer (IDL) when the junction is placed under reverse bias allows for strong adhesion at low voltages. In contrast, under forward bias, the electric field across the IDL is destroyed, substantially lowering the adhesion in a reversible fashion. These ionoelastomer electroadhesives are highly efficient with respect to the force capacity per electrostatic capacitive energy and are robust to defects or damage that typically lead to catastrophic failure of conventional dielectric electroadhesives. The findings provide new fundamental insight into low-voltage electroadhesion and broaden its possible applications.

14.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(24): 27708-27716, 2020 Jun 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32436689

RESUMEN

Micropatterned dry adhesives rely mainly on van der Waals interactions. In this paper, we explore the adhesion strength increase that can be achieved by superimposing an electrostatic field through interdigitated subsurface electrodes. Micropatterns were produced by replica molding in silicone. The adhesion forces were characterized systematically by means of experiments and numerical modeling. The force increased with the square of the applied voltage for electric fields up to 800 V. For larger fields, a less-than-quadratic scaling was observed, which is likely due to the small, field-dependent electrical conductivity of the materials involved. The additional adhesion force was found to be up to twice of the field-free adhesion. The results suggest an alternative method for the controlled handling of fragile or miniaturized objects.

15.
J R Soc Interface ; 16(156): 20190166, 2019 07 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31362623

RESUMEN

Displaying tactile feedback through a touchscreen via electrovibration has many potential applications in mobile devices, consumer electronics, home appliances and automotive industry though our knowledge and understanding of the underlying contact mechanics are very limited. An experimental study was conducted to investigate the contact evolution between the human finger and a touch screen under electrovibration using a robotic set-up and an imaging system. The results show that the effect of electrovibration is only present during full slip but not before slip. Hence, the coefficient of friction increases under electrovibration as expected during full slip, but the apparent contact area is significantly smaller during full slip when compared to that of no electrovibration condition. It is suggested that the main cause of the increase in friction during full slip is due to an increase in the real contact area and the reduction in apparent area is due to stiffening of the finger skin in the tangential direction.


Asunto(s)
Electrónica , Dedos/fisiología , Fricción , Robótica , Percepción del Tacto/fisiología , Vibración , Adulto , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino
16.
Soft Robot ; 6(6): 701-712, 2019 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31329029

RESUMEN

Soft robotic grippers (SRGs) have been extensively employed in robotic grasping and manipulation applications due to the fact that they are beneficial for pick-and-place of difficult-to-handle and delicate objects with various geometries and stiffness in a comfortable and safer way. This article presents a bio-inspired and shape-adaptive SRG augmented with electroadhesion (EA) functionality, FinEA, by a cost-effective combination of a Fin Ray structured two-fingered SRG with two soft-stretchable EA pads. The EA pads were manufactured by screen printing a layer of electrically conductive and elastomeric carbon black powder mixed with polydimethylsiloxane onto a dielectric substrate. The compliant Fin Ray fingers, composed of soft longitudinal beams and rigid cross beams, were structurally optimized by the finite element method using ABAQUS/CAE based on three key parameters: the open angle of the longitudinal beams, the spacing between the cross beams, and the incline angle of the cross beams. The soft beams were produced by a traditional soft lithography method, whereas the rigid cross beams were three-dimensionally printed. The resultant FinEA grippers were capable of lifting not only flat/thin materials without distorting them due to the employment of EA, but also concave and convex objects due to the passively shape-adaptive Fin Ray structure and the EA functionality. In addition, the proposed FinEA grippers were able to grasp delicate materials and objects whose diameters are larger than the overall gripper length. Furthermore, 65% more weight in shear were picked up by the FinEA gripper when 4 kV was applied compared with 0 V. The FinEA concept provides useful and alternative solution for controllable adhesion-based SRGs and may facilitate the inspiration and development of future SRGs with added functionality and enhanced versatility.

17.
Soft Robot ; 6(4): 455-467, 2019 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30883283

RESUMEN

This article presents a versatile soft crawling robot capable of rapid and effective locomotion. The robot mainly consists of two vacuum-actuated spring actuators and two electrostatic actuators. By programming the actuation sequences of different actuators, the robot is able to achieve two basic modes of locomotion: linear motion and turning. Subsequently, we have developed analytical models to interpret the static actuation performance of the robot body, including linear and bending motions. Moreover, an empirical dynamic model is also developed to optimize the locomotion speed in terms of frequency and duty cycle of the actuation signal. Furthermore, with the help of the strong electroadhesion force and fast response of the deformable body, the soft robot achieves a turning speed of 15.09°/s, which is one of the fastest among existing soft crawling robots to the best of our knowledge. In addition to the rapid and effective locomotion, the soft crawling robot can also achieve multiple impressive functions, including obstacle navigation in confined spaces, climbing a vertical wall with a speed of 6.67 mm/s (0.049 body length/s), carrying a payload of 69 times its self-weight on a horizontal surface, crossing over a 2 cm (0.15 body length) gap, and kicking a ball.

18.
Front Robot AI ; 6: 113, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33501128

RESUMEN

Soft robots have recently received much attention with their infinite degrees of freedoms and continuously deformable structures, which allow them to adapt well to the unstructured environment. A new type of soft actuator, namely, dielectric elastomer actuator (DEA) which has several excellent properties such as large deformation and high energy density is investigated in this study. Furthermore, a DEA-based soft robot is designed and developed. Due to the difficulty of accurate modeling caused by nonlinear electromechanical coupling and viscoelasticity, the iterative learning control (ILC) method is employed for the motion trajectory tracking with an uncertain model of the DEA. A D 2 type ILC algorithm is proposed for the task. Furthermore, a knowledge-based model framework with kinematic analysis is explored to prove the convergence of the proposed ILC. Finally, both simulations and experiments are conducted to demonstrate the effectiveness of the ILC, which results show that excellent tracking performance can be achieved by the soft crawling robot.

19.
Sci Total Environ ; 646: 1182-1194, 2019 Jan 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30235604

RESUMEN

Despite the extensive use of the Internet, printed newspapers remain a primary information source. In this study, reading a newspaper in a relatively confined or poorly ventilated indoor space was simulated to determine the profile of particles released from the newspaper into the air. The consecutive simulated conditions were reading without agitation of the newspaper (NoAg), followed by reading with agitation of the newspaper (Ag) and post-reading absent the newspaper (PostR), repeated with four newspapers. We found that particle number concentration (ΣN) fell during Ag owing to electroadhesion of ultrafine particles (<200 nm) caused by static charges created by friction between the paper surface and the air as a result of newspaper agitation. Conversely, particle surface area concentrations (ΣA) and particle volume concentrations (ΣV) increased significantly during Ag. This was because the larger, fine (1-2.5 µm) and coarse mode (2.5-10 µm), particles were detached from the newspaper during agitation due to inertial detachment - the release of even a small number of these particles contributing greatly to ΣA and ΣV. The critical particle number diameter (CPND) occurred at 207-310 nm. Particles smaller than this were subject to electroadhesion during Ag. The critical particle volume diameter (CPVD) occurred at 130-497 nm. Particles larger than this were subject to inertial detachment during Ag. These observations indicate that the electroadhesion of smaller particles and the inertial detachment of larger particles occur simultaneously. Particle mass concentrations were found to be as high as 168.7-534.3 µg m-3. However, these findings of high potential concentrations were based on the measurement in relative small micro-environment. The inhalation of such concentrations is a health risk for people who regularly read newspapers in a relatively confined or poorly ventilated indoor space.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Atmosféricos/análisis , Monitoreo del Ambiente , Papel , Material Particulado/análisis , Contaminación del Aire Interior , Tamaño de la Partícula , Lectura
20.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(50): 12668-12673, 2018 12 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30482858

RESUMEN

The understanding and control of human skin contact against technological substrates is the key aspect behind the design of several electromechanical devices. Among these, surface haptic displays that modulate the friction between the human finger and touch surface are emerging as user interfaces. One such modulation can be achieved by applying an alternating voltage to the conducting layer of a capacitive touchscreen to control electroadhesion between its surface and the finger pad. However, the nature of the contact interactions between the fingertip and the touchscreen under electroadhesion and the effects of confined material properties, such as layering and inelastic deformation of the stratum corneum, on the friction force are not completely understood yet. Here, we use a mean field theory based on multiscale contact mechanics to investigate the effect of electroadhesion on sliding friction and the dependency of the finger-touchscreen interaction on the applied voltage and other physical parameters. We present experimental results on how the friction between a finger and a touchscreen depends on the electrostatic attraction between them. The proposed model is successfully validated against full-scale (but computationally demanding) contact mechanics simulations and the experimental data. Our study shows that electroadhesion causes an increase in the real contact area at the microscopic level, leading to an increase in the electrovibrating tangential frictional force. We find that it should be possible to further augment the friction force, and thus the human tactile sensing, by using a thinner insulating film on the touchscreen than used in current devices.


Asunto(s)
Electrónica/instrumentación , Tacto/fisiología , Adhesividad , Fenómenos Biomecánicos , Dedos/fisiología , Fricción/fisiología , Humanos , Modelos Biológicos , Fenómenos Fisiológicos de la Piel , Teléfono Inteligente , Electricidad Estática , Vibración
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