Three-Axis Pneumatic Haptic Display for the Mechanical and Thermal Stimulation of a Human Finger Pad

Haptic displays have been developed to provide operators with rich tactile information using simple structures. In this study, a three-axis tactile actuator capable of thermal display was developed to deliver tactile senses more realistically and intuitively. The proposed haptic display uses pneumat...

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Main Authors: Eun-Hyuk Lee, Sang-Hoon Kim, Kwang-Seok Yun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-03-01
Series:Actuators
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0825/10/3/60
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spelling doaj-5b7c11e35f6549dfa9ec9d55f48c2e862021-03-18T00:02:45ZengMDPI AGActuators2076-08252021-03-0110606010.3390/act10030060Three-Axis Pneumatic Haptic Display for the Mechanical and Thermal Stimulation of a Human Finger PadEun-Hyuk Lee0Sang-Hoon Kim1Kwang-Seok Yun2Department of Electronic Engineering, Sogang University, Seoul 04107, KoreaDepartment of Electronic Engineering, Sogang University, Seoul 04107, KoreaDepartment of Electronic Engineering, Sogang University, Seoul 04107, KoreaHaptic displays have been developed to provide operators with rich tactile information using simple structures. In this study, a three-axis tactile actuator capable of thermal display was developed to deliver tactile senses more realistically and intuitively. The proposed haptic display uses pneumatic pressure to provide shear and normal tactile pressure through an inflation of the balloons inherent in the device. The device provides a lateral displacement of ±1.5 mm for shear haptic feedback and a vertical inflation of the balloon of up to 3.7 mm for normal haptic feedback. It is designed to deliver thermal feedback to the operator through the attachment of a heater to the finger stage of the device, in addition to mechanical haptic feedback. A custom-designed control module is employed to generate appropriate haptic feedback by computing signals from sensors or control computers. This control module has a manual gain control function to compensate for the force exerted on the device by the user’s fingers. Experimental results showed that it could improve the positional accuracy and linearity of the device and minimize hysteresis phenomena. The temperature of the device could be controlled by a pulse-width modulation signal from room temperature to 90 °C. Psychophysical experiments show that cognitive accuracy is affected by gain, and temperature is not significantly affected.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0825/10/3/60haptictactileshearthermalpneumatic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eun-Hyuk Lee
Sang-Hoon Kim
Kwang-Seok Yun
spellingShingle Eun-Hyuk Lee
Sang-Hoon Kim
Kwang-Seok Yun
Three-Axis Pneumatic Haptic Display for the Mechanical and Thermal Stimulation of a Human Finger Pad
Actuators
haptic
tactile
shear
thermal
pneumatic
author_facet Eun-Hyuk Lee
Sang-Hoon Kim
Kwang-Seok Yun
author_sort Eun-Hyuk Lee
title Three-Axis Pneumatic Haptic Display for the Mechanical and Thermal Stimulation of a Human Finger Pad
title_short Three-Axis Pneumatic Haptic Display for the Mechanical and Thermal Stimulation of a Human Finger Pad
title_full Three-Axis Pneumatic Haptic Display for the Mechanical and Thermal Stimulation of a Human Finger Pad
title_fullStr Three-Axis Pneumatic Haptic Display for the Mechanical and Thermal Stimulation of a Human Finger Pad
title_full_unstemmed Three-Axis Pneumatic Haptic Display for the Mechanical and Thermal Stimulation of a Human Finger Pad
title_sort three-axis pneumatic haptic display for the mechanical and thermal stimulation of a human finger pad
publisher MDPI AG
series Actuators
issn 2076-0825
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Haptic displays have been developed to provide operators with rich tactile information using simple structures. In this study, a three-axis tactile actuator capable of thermal display was developed to deliver tactile senses more realistically and intuitively. The proposed haptic display uses pneumatic pressure to provide shear and normal tactile pressure through an inflation of the balloons inherent in the device. The device provides a lateral displacement of ±1.5 mm for shear haptic feedback and a vertical inflation of the balloon of up to 3.7 mm for normal haptic feedback. It is designed to deliver thermal feedback to the operator through the attachment of a heater to the finger stage of the device, in addition to mechanical haptic feedback. A custom-designed control module is employed to generate appropriate haptic feedback by computing signals from sensors or control computers. This control module has a manual gain control function to compensate for the force exerted on the device by the user’s fingers. Experimental results showed that it could improve the positional accuracy and linearity of the device and minimize hysteresis phenomena. The temperature of the device could be controlled by a pulse-width modulation signal from room temperature to 90 °C. Psychophysical experiments show that cognitive accuracy is affected by gain, and temperature is not significantly affected.
topic haptic
tactile
shear
thermal
pneumatic
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0825/10/3/60
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AT sanghoonkim threeaxispneumatichapticdisplayforthemechanicalandthermalstimulationofahumanfingerpad
AT kwangseokyun threeaxispneumatichapticdisplayforthemechanicalandthermalstimulationofahumanfingerpad
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