Title :
Tactile sensing over articulated joints with stretchable sensors
Author :
Bhattacharjee, Tonmoy ; Jain, Abhishek ; Vaish, S. ; Killpack, M.D. ; Kemp, Charles C.
Author_Institution :
Healthcare Robot. Lab., Georgia Inst. of Technol., Atlanta, GA, USA
Abstract :
Biological organisms benefit from tactile sensing across the entire surfaces of their bodies. Robots may also be able to benefit from this type of sensing, but fully covering a robot with robust and capable tactile sensors entails numerous challenges. To date, most tactile sensors for robots have been used to cover rigid surfaces. In this paper, we focus on the challenge of tactile sensing across articulated joints, which requires sensing across a surface whose geometry varies over time. We first demonstrate the importance of sensing across joints by simulating a planar arm reaching in clutter and finding the frequency of contact at the joints. We then present a simple model of how much a tactile sensor would need to stretch in order to cover a 2 degree-of-freedom (DoF) wrist joint. Next, we describe and characterize a new tactile sensor made with stretchable fabrics. Finally, we present results for a stretchable sleeve with 25 tactile sensors that covers the forearm, 2 DoF wrist, and end effector of a humanoid robot. This sleeve enabled the robot to reach a target in instrumented clutter and reduce contact forces.
Keywords :
end effectors; humanoid robots; mechanical contact; tactile sensors; 2 degree-of-freedom wrist joint; articulated joints; biological organism; body surface; clutter; contact force reduction; contact frequency; end effector; geometry; humanoid robot; planar arm; rigid surface; robot tactile sensor; stretchable fabric; stretchable sensors; stretchable sleeve; tactile sensing; Fabrics; Joints; Tactile sensors; Wrist; Fabric-based Stretchable Sensors; Joint Sensing; Manipulation in Clutter; Tactile Sensing;
Conference_Titel :
World Haptics Conference (WHC), 2013
Conference_Location :
Daejeon
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0087-9
DOI :
10.1109/WHC.2013.6548392