An Inverting-Tube Clutching Contractile Soft Pneumatic Actuator
This addresses the need for efficient and controllable soft actuators in robotics and wearable haptic systems, though it is incremental with limited fatigue life in current prototypes.
The paper introduces a novel soft pneumatic actuator called InVACC that combines a contracting actuator with a soft clutch, achieving contraction to one-third of its extended length and supporting a peak tensile load of 120 N before slipping at 50 kPa clutch pressure.
This paper presents the simple synergistic combination of a novel contracting soft pneumatic actuator with a soft clutch (linear brake). The device is designated the Inverting-tube Vacuum ACtuator with Clutch (InVACC). The actuator alone (no clutch) is designated "InVAC" and uses vacuum pressure to invert a thin tube into a shorter section of reinforced flexible tubing. The inverting tube acts as rolling diaphragm and a flexible tendon. This allows the actuator to contract to one third of its extended length. The contractile-force-per-unit-pressure is approximately constant over the stroke. The theoretical maximum of this force is the product of the vacuum gauge pressure and half the interior cross-sectional area of the tube. The experimental evaluation revealed hysteretic losses that depend on the actuation direction and rate. With -81 kPa, the prototype produced 12.7 N of tension during extension and 7.5 N during retraction. The reinforced tubing of the InVAC was integrated with an inner collapsible "clutching" tube to create an InVACC. The clutch is engaged by applying a positive pressure between the reinforced tube and the clutching tube, which collapses the clutching tube onto the flexible tendon. With a pressure of 50 kPa, the InVACC clutch tested in this work was able to support a peak tensile load of 120 N before slipping. Though the fatigue life of the current prototypes is limited, improved fabrication methods for this novel actuator/clutch concept will enable new applications in robotics and wearable haptic systems.