Design, Fabrication and Testing of a Piezoresistive-Based Tactile Sensor for Minimally Invasive Surgery

Minimally invasive robotic surgery (MIRS) has become a preferred method for patients for the last two decades, thanks to its crucial advantages over classical open surgeries. Although MIRS has some advantages, it has a few drawbacks. Since MIRS technology includes performing surgery through small in...

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Main Authors: Javad Dargahi, Ahmad Atieh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Research Plus Journals 2015-09-01
Series:International Journal of Advanced Research in Engineering
Online Access:http://researchplusjournals.com/index.php/IJARE/article/view/57
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spelling doaj-6f4527f7cd424b44890deaee72e0f8e42020-11-24T22:06:44ZengResearch Plus JournalsInternational Journal of Advanced Research in Engineering2412-43622015-09-0112172210.24178/ijare.2015.1.2.1757Design, Fabrication and Testing of a Piezoresistive-Based Tactile Sensor for Minimally Invasive SurgeryJavad Dargahi0Ahmad Atieh1Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, CanadaDepartment of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, CanadaMinimally invasive robotic surgery (MIRS) has become a preferred method for patients for the last two decades, thanks to its crucial advantages over classical open surgeries. Although MIRS has some advantages, it has a few drawbacks. Since MIRS technology includes performing surgery through small incisions using long slender tools, one of the main drawbacks of MIRS becomes the loss of direct contact with the patient’s body in the site of operation. Therefore, the surgeon loses the sense of touch during the operation which is one of the important tools to investigate the health condition of the treated tissue. This paper presents a novel piezoresistive-based multifunctional tactile sensor that is able to measure the contact force, relative hardness of the contact object, and the position of a hidden lump at the same time. A prototype of the designed sensor has been fabricated, simulated, analyzed, and tested numerically and experimentally. The experiments have been performed on hyperelastic materials, which are silicone rubber samples with different hardness values that resemble different biological tissues. The ability of the sensor to measure the contact force and relative hardness of the contact objects is tested with several experiments. A finite element (FE) model has been built in COMSOL Multiphysics (v3.4) environment to simulate both the mechanical behavior of the silicone rubber samples, and the interaction between the sensor and the silicone rubbers. Both numerical and experimental analysis proved the capability of the sensor to distinguish between different silicone rubber samples.http://researchplusjournals.com/index.php/IJARE/article/view/57
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Javad Dargahi
Ahmad Atieh
spellingShingle Javad Dargahi
Ahmad Atieh
Design, Fabrication and Testing of a Piezoresistive-Based Tactile Sensor for Minimally Invasive Surgery
International Journal of Advanced Research in Engineering
author_facet Javad Dargahi
Ahmad Atieh
author_sort Javad Dargahi
title Design, Fabrication and Testing of a Piezoresistive-Based Tactile Sensor for Minimally Invasive Surgery
title_short Design, Fabrication and Testing of a Piezoresistive-Based Tactile Sensor for Minimally Invasive Surgery
title_full Design, Fabrication and Testing of a Piezoresistive-Based Tactile Sensor for Minimally Invasive Surgery
title_fullStr Design, Fabrication and Testing of a Piezoresistive-Based Tactile Sensor for Minimally Invasive Surgery
title_full_unstemmed Design, Fabrication and Testing of a Piezoresistive-Based Tactile Sensor for Minimally Invasive Surgery
title_sort design, fabrication and testing of a piezoresistive-based tactile sensor for minimally invasive surgery
publisher Research Plus Journals
series International Journal of Advanced Research in Engineering
issn 2412-4362
publishDate 2015-09-01
description Minimally invasive robotic surgery (MIRS) has become a preferred method for patients for the last two decades, thanks to its crucial advantages over classical open surgeries. Although MIRS has some advantages, it has a few drawbacks. Since MIRS technology includes performing surgery through small incisions using long slender tools, one of the main drawbacks of MIRS becomes the loss of direct contact with the patient’s body in the site of operation. Therefore, the surgeon loses the sense of touch during the operation which is one of the important tools to investigate the health condition of the treated tissue. This paper presents a novel piezoresistive-based multifunctional tactile sensor that is able to measure the contact force, relative hardness of the contact object, and the position of a hidden lump at the same time. A prototype of the designed sensor has been fabricated, simulated, analyzed, and tested numerically and experimentally. The experiments have been performed on hyperelastic materials, which are silicone rubber samples with different hardness values that resemble different biological tissues. The ability of the sensor to measure the contact force and relative hardness of the contact objects is tested with several experiments. A finite element (FE) model has been built in COMSOL Multiphysics (v3.4) environment to simulate both the mechanical behavior of the silicone rubber samples, and the interaction between the sensor and the silicone rubbers. Both numerical and experimental analysis proved the capability of the sensor to distinguish between different silicone rubber samples.
url http://researchplusjournals.com/index.php/IJARE/article/view/57
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