“…Commercial micro-grippers are available from companies such as Femto Tools (Zurich, Switzerland), Kleindiek Nanotechnik (Reutlingen, Germany), Klocke Nanotechnik (Aachen, Germany), and Zyvex Instruments (Richardson, TX, USA). However, the majority of these gripping systems are designed for grasping objects of a few tens of microns to a few hundreds of microns (Goldfarb & Celanovic, 1999; Carrozza et al, 2000; Menciassi et al, 2003; Roch et al, 2003; Nguyen et al, 2004; Choi et al, 2005; Clevy et al, 2005; Fahlbusch et al, 2005; Kim et al, 2005; Perez et al, 2005; Huang et al, 2006; Nah & Zhong, 2007; Solano & Wood, 2007; Kim et al, 2008; Kyung et al, 2008; Panepucci & Martinez, 2008; Chen et al, 2009; Zubir et al, 2009; Deutschinger et al, 2010; Jayaram & Joshi, 2010; Raghavendra et al, 2010), with some grippers for sub-micron objects (Boggild et al, 2001; Nakayama, 2002; Jericho et al, 2004; Molhave & Hansen, 2005; Blideran et al, 2006 a , 2006 b ; Sardan et al, 2008; Andersen et al, 2009). Most of the gripping systems that operate in the micron range were designed and developed for SEM-level experiments.…”