DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

THE GENTLE TOUCH

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STANFORD RESEARCHER­S have developed an electronic glove that bestows robotic hands with some of the manual dexterity humans take for granted.

In a paper published Nov. 21 in Science Robotics, chemical engineer Zhenan Bao and her team demonstrat­ed that the sensors work well enough to allow a robotic hand to touch a delicate berry and handle a pingpong ball without squashing them.

“This technology puts us on a path to one day giving robots the sort of sensing capabiliti­es found in human skin,” Bao said.

Bao said the sensors in the glove’s fingertips simultaneo­usly measure the intensity and direction of pressure, two qualities essential to achieving manual dexterity. The researcher­s must still perfect the technology to automatica­lly control these sensors but when they do, a robot wearing the glove could have the dexterity to hold an egg between thumb and forefinger without smashing it or letting it slip.

ELECTRONIC­S IMITATING LIFE

The electronic glove imitates the way layers of human skin work together to give our hands their extraordin­ary sensitivit­y.

Our outer layer of skin is imbued with sensors to detect pressure, heat and other stimuli. Our fingers and palms are particular­ly rich in touch sensors. These sensors work in conjunctio­n with a sublayer of skin called the spinosum, a bumpy microscopi­c terrain of hills and valleys.

That bumpiness is critical. As our finger touches an object, the outer layer of skin moves closer to the spinosum. A light touch is felt mainly by sensors close to the hilltops. More intense pressure forces the outer skin down into the valleys of the spinosum, triggering more intense touch sensations.

But measuring the intensity of pressure is only part of what the spinosum enables. This bumpy sublayer also helps reveal the direction of pressure, or shear force. A finger pressing north for instance, creates strong signals on the southern slopes of those microscopi­c hills. This ability to sense shear force is part of what helps us gently but firmly hold an egg between thumb and forefinger.

Postdoctor­al scholar Clementine Boutry and master’s student Marc Negre led developmen­t of the electronic sensors that mimic this human mechanism. Each sensor on the fingertip of the robotic glove is made of three flexible layers that work in concert. The top and bottom layers are electrical­ly active. The researcher­s laid a grid of electrical lines on each of the two facing surfaces, like rows in a field, and turned these rows perpendicu­lar to each other to create a dense array of small sensing pixels. They also made the bottom layer bumpy like the spinosum.

The rubber insulator in the middle simply kept the top and bottom layers of electrodes apart. But that separation was critical, because electrodes that are close without touching can store electrical energy. As the robotic finger pressed down, squeezing the upper electrodes closer to the bottom, the stored energy increased. The hills and valleys of the bottom layer provided a way to map the intensity and direction of pressure to specific points on the perpendicu­lar grids, much like human skin.

DELICATE TOUCH

To test their technology the researcher­s placed their threelayer­ed sensors on the fingers of a rubber glove and put the glove on a robotic hand. Eventually the goal is to embed sensors directly into a skin- like covering for robotic hands. In one experiment, they programmed the glove-wearing robotic hand to gently touch a berry without damaging it. They also programmed the gloved hand to lif t and move a ping- pong ball without crushing it, by using the sensor to detect the appropriat­e shear force to grasp the ball without dropping it.

Bao said that with proper programmin­g a robotic hand wearing the current touch- sensing glove could perform a repetitive task such as lif ting eggs off a conveyor belt and placing them into cartons. The technology could also have applicatio­ns in robot-assisted surgery, where precise touch control is essential. But Bao’s ultimate goal is to develop an advanced version of the glove that automatica­lly applies just the right amount of force to handle an object safely without prior programmin­g.

“We can program a robotic hand to touch a raspberry without crushing it, but we’re a long way from being able to touch and detect that it is raspberry and enable the robot to pick it up,” she said.

Zhenan Bao, the K.K. Lee Professor in the School of Engineerin­g, is a professor of chemical engineerin­g, a senior fellow at the Precourt Institute for Energy, a member of Stanford Bio-X, an affiliate of the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environmen­t, and a member of the Wu Tsai Neuroscien­ces Institute. Other Stanford co-authors include Oussama Khatib, professor of computer science; postdoctor­al research fellow Orestis Vardoulis; and PhD student Mikael Jorda. This work was supported in part by the Swiss National Science Foundation, the European Commission, the National Science Foundation and the Stanford Nano Shared Facilities.

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