Programmable Deformation Design of Porous Soft Actuator through Volumetric-Pattern-Induced Anisotropy
By: Canqi Meng, Weibang Bai
Conventional soft pneumatic actuators, typically based on hollow elastomeric chambers, often suffer from small structural support and require costly geometry-specific redesigns for multimodal functionality. Porous materials such as foam, filled into chambers, can provide structural stability for the actuators. However, methods to achieve programmable deformation by tailoring the porous body itself remain underexplored. In this paper, a novel design method is presented to realize soft porous actuators with programmable deformation by incising specific patterns into the porous foam body. This approach introduces localized structural anisotropy of the foam guiding the material's deformation under a global vacuum input. Furthermore, three fundamental patterns on a cylindrical foam substrate are discussed: transverse for bending, longitudinal for tilting, and diagonal for twisting. A computational model is built with Finite Element Analysis (FEA), to investigate the mechanism of the incision-patterning method. Experiments demonstrate that with a potential optimal design of the pattern array number N, actuators can achieve bending up to $80^{\circ}$ (N=2), tilting of $18^{\circ}$ (N=1), and twisting of $115^{\circ}$ (N=8). The versatility of our approach is demonstrated via pattern transferability, scalability, and mold-less rapid prototyping of complex designs. As a comprehensive application, we translate the human hand crease map into a functional incision pattern, creating a bio-inspired soft robot hand capable of human-like adaptive grasping. Our work provides a new, efficient, and scalable paradigm for the design of multi-functional soft porous robots.
Similar Papers
Programmable Telescopic Soft Pneumatic Actuators for Deployable and Shape Morphing Soft Robots
Robotics
Makes robots bend and stretch to fit tight spaces.
Field-programmable dynamics in a soft magnetic actuator enabling true random number generation and reservoir computing
Robotics
Makes robots do new, unpredictable, useful things.
Development and testing of novel soft sleeve actuators
Robotics
Makes helpful robot sleeves for easier movement.