The compliant, continuum, and configurable robotics field in general has gained growing interest in the past years especially with the exciting advances in artificial intelligence technology, [1] which could enable various valuable applications ranging from manufacturing to safety and healthcare. [2,3] Soft robots are of notable interest because, unlike their rigid counterpart, they can easily deform while being mechanically resilient, [4,5] adapt to the outer environment without harm to humans, [6] and finally, enable low-cost manufacturing. [7] For robots to interact with the outer environment and complete tasks, a set of sensors and actuators need to be integrated into the system. Soft robots, in specific, present additional challenges because their sensing and actuation devices are generally highly integrated within the body of the robot and its whole functionality. These challenges become even more critical when the soft robot is scaled down to sub-centimeter size as the sensing, power, and data analysis units are moved off-board. As a result, miniaturized soft actuators that respond to various stimuli and show large deformations in addition to mechanical resilience are crucial. These would be particularly promising for application in artificial muscles, microrobots, and micro-manipulators. [8-10] Active and soft materials are promising for this task as they can be actuated through various external stimuli, such as photons, thermal, magnetic and/or electric field. Such materials range from particles, to polymers (either electroactive or shape memory), papers, fluids, shape memory alloys (SMAs), liquid metals, hydrogels, 2D materials, or a combination of these. [6-25] Nevertheless, some materials can be more suitable for a specific set of applications than others; for instance, materials stimulated by the near-infrared (NIR) spectrum are promising for biomedical applications, whereas sunlight-stimulated materials are suitable for nature-inspired soft robots used in outside environments. Various useful metrics are generally used to assess the performance of the actuators; these include the generated stress and strain, Young's modulus or measured stiffness, in addition to their power, work, energy, and force density. In this Review article, however, we focus on the application of the soft actuators in soft robotics where the reported metrics include mode and speed of actuation (or locomotion), power, voltage, current (of the driving signal), lifting force, and weight among others. In this Review article, different active materials that have been developed and used in soft actuators for soft robotics are discussed and grouped by the stimulus that generates the actuation response as shown in Figure 1. The physics of operation, resulting deformations, mechanical resilience, and their pros and cons are presented with a focus on the applications of the different soft
Soft Robotics In article number http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/aisy.202000128, Muhammad Mustafa Hussain and co‐workers present a comprehensive review on soft robots which are paving the way towards a wide range of vital applications such as drug delivery, among others. Various state‐of‐the‐art soft actuators which respond to different stimuli, including light, heat, and applied electric field with a focus on their various applications in soft robotics, are discussed.
Point-of-care testing (POC) has the ability to detect chronic and infectious diseases early or at the time of occurrence and provide a state-of-the-art personalized healthcare system. Recently, wearable and flexible sensors have been employed to analyze sweat, glucose, blood, and human skin conditions. However, a flexible sensing system that allows for the real-time monitoring of throat-related illnesses, such as salivary parotid gland swelling caused by flu and mumps, is necessary. Here, for the first time, a wearable, highly flexible, and stretchable piezoresistive sensing patch based on carbon nanotubes (CNTs) is reported, which can record muscle expansion or relaxation in real-time, and thus act as a next-generation POC sensor. The patch offers an excellent gauge factor for in-plane stretching and spatial expansion with low hysteresis. The actual extent of muscle expansion is calculated and the gauge factor for applications entailing volumetric deformations is redefined. Additionally, a bluetooth-low-energy system that tracks muscle activity in real-time and transmits the output signals wirelessly to a smartphone app is utilized. Numerical calculations verify that the low stress and strain lead to excellent mechanical reliability and repeatability. Finally, a dummy muscle is inflated using a pneumatic-based actuator to demonstrate the application of the affixed wearable next-generation POC sensor.
Structural engineering plays an essential role in designing, improving, and optimizing an electromechanical system, instinctively affecting its performance. In this study, design optimization, finite element analysis, and experimental evaluation of capacitive pressure sensors were conducted. The air pressure sensing application was demonstrated to characterize different sensors, which include a combination of multiple rectangular cantilevers and diaphragms (square and circular-shaped). After the design improvement, we found that the square and circular diaphragms each with two trapezoidal cantilevers exhibited highest sensitivity to air pressure monitoring among the different investigated designs which combine the square and circular diaphragms with cantilevers. These designs were then selected for further analysis for acoustic pressure monitoring. The sensors were fabricated using the doit-yourself technique with household materials such as post-it paper, posted tape, and foil. Our approach offers an alternative to the conventional cleanroom fabrication technique and uses easily available materials to fabricate affordable sensors. Therefore, this is the first step toward the development of democratized and sustainable electronic devices that are affordable and available to everyone on the internet.
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