Controlling fine touch sensations with polymer tacticity and crystallinity

The friction generated between a finger and an object forms the mechanical stimuli behind fine touch perception. To control friction, and therefore tactile perception, current haptic devices typically rely on physical features like bumps or pins, but chemical and microscale morphology of surfaces co...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSoft matter Vol. 18; no. 2; pp. 3928 - 394
Main Authors Nolin, Abigail, Pierson, Kelly, Hlibok, Rainer, Lo, Chun-Yuan, Kayser, Laure V, Dhong, Charles
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Royal Society of Chemistry 25.05.2022
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Summary:The friction generated between a finger and an object forms the mechanical stimuli behind fine touch perception. To control friction, and therefore tactile perception, current haptic devices typically rely on physical features like bumps or pins, but chemical and microscale morphology of surfaces could be harnessed to recreate a wider variety of tactile sensations. Here, we sought to develop a new way to create tactile sensations by relying on differences in microstructure as quantified by the degree of crystallinity in polymer films. To isolate crystallinity, we used polystyrene films with the same chemical formula and number averaged molecular weights, but which differed in tacticity and annealing conditions. These films were also sufficiently thin as to be rigid which minimized effects from bulk stiffness and had variations in roughness lower than detectable by humans. To connect crystallinity to human perception, we performed mechanical testing with a mock finger to form predictions about the degree of crystallinity necessary to result in successful discrimination by human subjects. Psychophysical testing verified that humans could discriminate surfaces which differed only in the degree of crystallinity. Although related, human performance was not strongly correlated with a straightforward difference in the degree of crystallinity. Rather, human performance was better explained by quantifying transitions in steady to unsteady sliding and the generation of slow frictional waves ( r 2 = 79.6%). Tuning fine touch with polymer crystallinity may lead to better engineering of existing haptic interfaces or lead to new classes of actuators based on changes in microstructure. Humans can distinguish thin films of polystyrene which differed only in their degree of crystallinity.
Bibliography:https://doi.org/10.1039/d2sm00264g
Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI
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A.N, K.P., R.P., and C.L. performed experiments. A.N., L.K., and C.D. conceptualized the study, performed analysis, and wrote the manuscript.
Author Contributions
ISSN:1744-683X
1744-6848
1744-6848
DOI:10.1039/d2sm00264g