Negshell casting: 3D-printed structured and sacrificial cores for soft robot fabrication.

Soft robot fabrication by casting liquid elastomer often requires multiple steps of casting or skillful manual labor. We present a novel soft robotic fabrication technique: negshell casting (negative-space eggshell casting), that reduces the steps required for fabrication by introducing 3D-printed t...

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Main Authors: Pornthep Preechayasomboon, Eric Rombokas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234354
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spelling doaj-ab3be5a243784764a138c4bf0836a67e2021-03-03T21:51:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01156e023435410.1371/journal.pone.0234354Negshell casting: 3D-printed structured and sacrificial cores for soft robot fabrication.Pornthep PreechayasomboonEric RombokasSoft robot fabrication by casting liquid elastomer often requires multiple steps of casting or skillful manual labor. We present a novel soft robotic fabrication technique: negshell casting (negative-space eggshell casting), that reduces the steps required for fabrication by introducing 3D-printed thin-walled cores for use in casting that are meant to be left in place instead of being removed later in the fabrication process. Negshell casting consists of two types of cores: sacrificial cores (negshell cores) and structural cores. Negshell cores are designed to be broken into small pieces that have little effect on the mechanical structure of the soft robot, and can be used for creating fluidic channels and bellows for actuation. Structural cores, on the other hand, are not meant to be broken, and are for increasing the stiffness of soft robotic structures, such as endoskeletons. We describe the design and fabrication concepts for both types of cores and report the mechanical characterization of the cores embedded in silicone rubber specimens. We also present an example use-case of negshell casting for a single joint soft robotic finger, along with an experiment to demonstrate how negshell casting concepts can aid in force transmission. Finally, we present real-world usage of negshell casting in a 6 degree-of-freedom three-finger soft robotic gripper, and a demonstration of the gripper in a robotic pick-and-place task. A companion website with further details about fabrication (as well as an introduction to molding and casting for those who are unfamiliar with the terms), engineering file downloads, and experimental data is provided at https://negshell.github.io/.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234354
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pornthep Preechayasomboon
Eric Rombokas
spellingShingle Pornthep Preechayasomboon
Eric Rombokas
Negshell casting: 3D-printed structured and sacrificial cores for soft robot fabrication.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Pornthep Preechayasomboon
Eric Rombokas
author_sort Pornthep Preechayasomboon
title Negshell casting: 3D-printed structured and sacrificial cores for soft robot fabrication.
title_short Negshell casting: 3D-printed structured and sacrificial cores for soft robot fabrication.
title_full Negshell casting: 3D-printed structured and sacrificial cores for soft robot fabrication.
title_fullStr Negshell casting: 3D-printed structured and sacrificial cores for soft robot fabrication.
title_full_unstemmed Negshell casting: 3D-printed structured and sacrificial cores for soft robot fabrication.
title_sort negshell casting: 3d-printed structured and sacrificial cores for soft robot fabrication.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Soft robot fabrication by casting liquid elastomer often requires multiple steps of casting or skillful manual labor. We present a novel soft robotic fabrication technique: negshell casting (negative-space eggshell casting), that reduces the steps required for fabrication by introducing 3D-printed thin-walled cores for use in casting that are meant to be left in place instead of being removed later in the fabrication process. Negshell casting consists of two types of cores: sacrificial cores (negshell cores) and structural cores. Negshell cores are designed to be broken into small pieces that have little effect on the mechanical structure of the soft robot, and can be used for creating fluidic channels and bellows for actuation. Structural cores, on the other hand, are not meant to be broken, and are for increasing the stiffness of soft robotic structures, such as endoskeletons. We describe the design and fabrication concepts for both types of cores and report the mechanical characterization of the cores embedded in silicone rubber specimens. We also present an example use-case of negshell casting for a single joint soft robotic finger, along with an experiment to demonstrate how negshell casting concepts can aid in force transmission. Finally, we present real-world usage of negshell casting in a 6 degree-of-freedom three-finger soft robotic gripper, and a demonstration of the gripper in a robotic pick-and-place task. A companion website with further details about fabrication (as well as an introduction to molding and casting for those who are unfamiliar with the terms), engineering file downloads, and experimental data is provided at https://negshell.github.io/.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234354
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