Steering and Control of Miniaturized Untethered Soft Magnetic Grippers With Haptic Assistance

Untethered miniature robotics have recently shown promising results in several scenarios at the microscale, such as targeted drug delivery, microassembly, and biopsy procedures. However, the vast majority of these small-scale robots have very limited manipulation capabilities, and none of the steeri...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE transactions on automation science and engineering Vol. 15; no. 1; pp. 290 - 306
Main Authors Pacchierotti, Claudio, Ongaro, Federico, van den Brink, Frank, Yoon, ChangKyu, Prattichizzo, Domenico, Gracias, David H., Misra, Sarthak
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States IEEE 01.01.2018
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
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Summary:Untethered miniature robotics have recently shown promising results in several scenarios at the microscale, such as targeted drug delivery, microassembly, and biopsy procedures. However, the vast majority of these small-scale robots have very limited manipulation capabilities, and none of the steering systems currently available enables humans to intuitively and effectively control dexterous miniaturized robots in a remote environment. In this paper, we present an innovative micro-teleoperation system with haptic assistance for the intuitive steering and control of miniaturized self-folding soft magnetic grippers in 2-D space. The soft grippers can be wirelessly positioned using weak magnetic fields and opened/closed by changing their temperature. An image-guided algorithm tracks the position of the controlled miniaturized gripper in the remote environment. A haptic interface provides the human operator with compelling haptic sensations about the interaction between the gripper and the environment as well as enables the operator to intuitively control the target position and grasping configuration of the gripper. Finally, magnetic and thermal control systems regulate the position and grasping configuration of the gripper. The viability of the proposed approach is demonstrated through two experiments involving 26 human subjects. Providing haptic stimuli elicited statistically significant improvements in the performance of the considered navigation and micro-manipulation tasks.
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ISSN:1545-5955
1558-3783
DOI:10.1109/TASE.2016.2635106