Electrostatic Brakes Enable Individual Joint Control of Underactuated, Highly Articulated Robots

04/05/2022
by   Patrick Lancaster, et al.
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Highly articulated organisms serve as blueprints for incredibly dexterous mechanisms, but building similarly capable robotic counterparts has been hindered by the difficulties of developing electromechanical actuators with both the high strength and compactness of biological muscle. We develop a stackable electrostatic brake that has comparable specific tension and weight to that of muscles and integrate it into a robotic joint. Compared to electromechanical motors, our brake-equipped joint is four times lighter and one thousand times more power efficient while exerting similar holding torques. Our joint design enables a ten degree-of-freedom robot equipped with only one motor to manipulate multiple objects simultaneously. We also show that the use of brakes allows a two-fingered robot to perform in-hand re-positioning of an object 45 brakes. Relative to fully actuated robots, our findings suggest that robots equipped with such electrostatic brakes will have lower weight, volume, and power consumption yet retain the ability to reach arbitrary joint configurations.

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