A Light Touch: Embedded Optical Sensors Could Make Robotic Hands More Dexterous

Carnegie Mellon creates sensor-rich robotic hand and new stretchable sensor.

The new stretchable optical sensor could be used in a soft robotic skin to detect contact and measure force. Image courtesy of Carnegie Mellon University.


By Byron Spice

Optical sensors may be uniquely suited for use in robotic hands, according to Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) researchers who have developed a three-fingered soft robotic hand with multiple embedded fiber optic sensors. They also have created a new type of stretchable optical sensor.

CMU researchers developed a 3D-robotic hand with a record number of embedded sensors for more accurate robotics. Image courtesy of Carnegie Mellon University. CMU researchers developed a 3D-robotic hand with a record number of embedded sensors for more accurate robotics. Image courtesy of Carnegie Mellon University.

By using fiber optics, the researchers were able to embed 14 strain sensors into each of the fingers in the robotic hand, giving it the ability to determine where its fingertips are in contact and to detect forces of less than a tenth of a newton. The new stretchable optical sensing material, not incorporated in this version of the hand, potentially could be used in a soft robotic skin to provide even more feedback.

“If you want robots to work autonomously and to react safely to unexpected forces in everyday environments, you need robotic hands that have more sensors than is typical today,” said Yong-Lae Park, assistant professor of robotics. “Human skin contains thousands of tactile sensory units only in the fingertip and a spider has hundreds of mechanoreceptors on each leg, but even a state-of-the-art humanoid such as NASA’s Robonaut has only 42 sensors in its hand and wrist.”

Adding conventional pressure or force sensors is problematic because wiring can be complicated, prone to breaking and susceptible to interference from electric motors and other electromagnetic devices. But a single optical fiber can contain several sensors; all of the sensors in each of the fingers of the CMU hand are connected with four fibers, although, theoretically, a single fiber could do the job, Park said. And the optical sensors are impervious to electromagnetic interference.

Industrial robots, working in a controlled environment where people don’t venture, are capable of extremely precise manipulation with only limited sensors. But as roboticists at CMU and elsewhere work to develop soft robots that can interact routinely and safely with humans, increased attention to tactile and force sensing is essential, Park said.

Each of the fingers on the robotic hand mimic the skeletal structure of a human finger, with a fingertip, middle node and base node connected by joints. The skeletal “bones” are 3D-printed hard plastic and incorporate eight sensors for detecting force. Each of the three sections is covered with a soft silicone rubber skin embedded with a total of six sensors that detect where contact has been made. A single active tendon works to bend the finger, while a passive elastic tendon provides opposing force to straighten the finger.

The hand, developed with mechanical engineering students Leo Jiang and Kevin Low, incorporates commercially available fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensors, which detect strain by measuring shifts in the wavelength of light reflected by the optical fiber.

Despite their advantages, conventional optical sensors don’t stretch much—glass fibers stretch hardly at all and even polymer fibers stretch typically only 20-25%, Park notes. That is a limiting factor in a device such as a hand, where a wide range of motion is essential. Park has previously developed highly stretchable microfluidic soft sensors— membranes that measure strain via liquid-conductor-filled channels—but they are difficult to make and can cause a mess if the liquid leaks out.

So Park, working with mechanical engineering students Celeste To from CMU and Tess Lee Hellebrekers from the University of Texas, invented a highly stretchable and flexible optical sensor, using a combination of commercially available silicone rubbers. These soft waveguides are lined with reflective gold; as the silicone is stretched, cracks develop in the reflective layer, allowing light to escape. By measuring the loss of light, the researchers are able to calculate strain or other deformations.

The new stretchable optical sensor could be used in a soft robotic skin to detect contact and measure force. Image courtesy of Carnegie Mellon University. The new stretchable optical sensor could be used in a soft robotic skin to detect contact and measure force. Image courtesy of Carnegie Mellon University.

Park said this type of flexible optical sensor could be incorporated into soft skins. Such a skin would not only be able to detect contact, as is the case with the soft components in the CMU hand, but also measure force.

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