4.7 Article

Harnessing the Multistability of Kresling Origami for Reconfigurable Articulation in Soft Robotic Arms

Journal

SOFT ROBOTICS
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 212-223

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/soro.2020.0075

Keywords

articulation; Kresling origami; multistability; manipulator

Categories

Funding

  1. Clemson University
  2. National Science Foundation [CMMI: 1751449, 1933124]
  3. Directorate For Engineering
  4. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [1933124] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study explores the use of Kresling origami modules to create a soft robotic arm with reconfigurable articulation, reducing the control requirements. The findings suggest that a higher angle ratio, shorter resting length, and more polygon sides can provide more significant and robust bending stiffness tuning.
This study examines a biology-inspired approach of using reconfigurable articulation to reduce the control requirement for soft robotic arms. We construct a robotic arm by assembling Kresling origami modules that exhibit predictable bistability. By switching between their two stable states, these origami modules can behave either like a flexible joint with low bending stiffness or like a stiff link with high stiffness, without requiring any continuous power supply. In this way, the robotic arm can exhibit pseudo-linkage kinematics with lower control requirements and improved motion accuracy. A unique advantage of using origami as the robotic arm skeleton is that its bending stiffness ratio between stable states is directly related to the underlying Kresling design. Therefore, we conduct extensive parametric analyses and experimental validations to identify the optimized Kresling pattern for articulation. The results indicate that a higher angle ratio, a smaller resting length at contracted stable state, and a large number of polygon sides can offer more significant and robust bending stiffness tuning. Based on this insight, we construct a proof-of-concept, tendon-driven robotic arm consisting of three modules and show that it can exhibit the desired reconfigurable articulation behavior. Moreover, the deformations of this manipulator are consistent with kinematic model predictions, which validate the possibility of using simple controllers for such compliant robotic systems.

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