ROOct 19, 2021

A Soft-Rigid Hybrid Gripper with Lateral Compliance and Dexterous In-hand Manipulation

arXiv:2110.10035v161 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of low dexterity in robotic grippers for applications requiring both strength and fine manipulation, though it appears incremental as it builds on hybrid gripper trends.

The researchers tackled the limited dexterity of existing hybrid grippers by designing a new soft-rigid hybrid gripper with 8 independent muscles inspired by the human MCP joint, enabling in-hand manipulation and lateral compliance, and demonstrated it could grasp objects over 25 times its own weight.

Soft grippers are receiving growing attention due to their compliance-based interactive safety and dexterity. Hybrid gripper (soft actuators enhanced by rigid constraints) is a new trend in soft gripper design. With right structural components actuated by soft actuators, they could achieve excellent grasping adaptability and payload, while also being easy to model and control with conventional kinematics. However, existing works were mostly focused on achieving superior payload and perception with simple planar workspaces, resulting in far less dexterity compared with conventional grippers. In this work, we took inspiration from the human Metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joint and proposed a new hybrid gripper design with 8 independent muscles. It was shown that adding the MCP complexity was critical in enabling a range of novel features in the hybrid gripper, including in-hand manipulation, lateral passive compliance, as well as new control modes. A prototype gripper was fabricated and tested on our proprietary dual-arm robot platform with vision guided grasping. With very lightweight pneumatic bellows soft actuators, the gripper could grasp objects over 25 times its own weight with lateral compliance. Using the dual-arm platform, highly anthropomorphic dexterous manipulations were demonstrated using two hybrid grippers, from Tug-of-war on a rigid rod, to passing a soft towel between two grippers using in-hand manipulation. Matching with the novel features and performance specifications of the proposed hybrid gripper, the underlying modeling, actuation, control, and experimental validation details were also presented, offering a promising approach to achieving enhanced dexterity, strength, and compliance in robotic grippers.

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