Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Development, Experimental, and Numerical Charac...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Development, Experimental, and Numerical Characterisation of Novel Flexible Strain Sensors for Soft Robotics Applications

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Development, Experimental, and Numerical Characterisation of Novel Flexible Strain Sensors for Soft Robotics Applications. / Nnadi, Sylvester Ndidiamaka; Ajadalu, Ivor; Rahmani, Amir et al.
In: Robotics, Vol. 13, No. 7, 103, 11.07.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Nnadi, S. N., Ajadalu, I., Rahmani, A., Aliyu, A., Elgeneidy, K., Montazeri, A., & Sohani, B. (2024). Development, Experimental, and Numerical Characterisation of Novel Flexible Strain Sensors for Soft Robotics Applications. Robotics, 13(7), Article 103. https://doi.org/10.3390/robotics13070103

Vancouver

Nnadi SN, Ajadalu I, Rahmani A, Aliyu A, Elgeneidy K, Montazeri A et al. Development, Experimental, and Numerical Characterisation of Novel Flexible Strain Sensors for Soft Robotics Applications. Robotics. 2024 Jul 11;13(7):103. doi: 10.3390/robotics13070103

Author

Nnadi, Sylvester Ndidiamaka ; Ajadalu, Ivor ; Rahmani, Amir et al. / Development, Experimental, and Numerical Characterisation of Novel Flexible Strain Sensors for Soft Robotics Applications. In: Robotics. 2024 ; Vol. 13, No. 7.

Bibtex

@article{f71551de55ba48aba56a412013d14e8e,
title = "Development, Experimental, and Numerical Characterisation of Novel Flexible Strain Sensors for Soft Robotics Applications",
abstract = "Medical and agricultural robots that interact with living tissue or pick fruit require tactile and flexible sensors to minimise or eliminate damage. Until recently, research has focused on the development of robots made of rigid materials, such as metal or plastic. Due to their complex configuration, poor spatial adaptability and low flexibility, rigid robots are not fully applicable in some special environments such as limb rehabilitation, fragile objects gripping, human–machine interaction, and locomotion. All these should be done in an accurate and safe manner for them to be useful. However, the design and manufacture of soft robot parts that interact with living tissue or fragile objects is not as straightforward. Given that hyper-elasticity and conductivity are involved, conventional (subtractive) manufacturing can result in wasted materials (which are expensive), incompatible parts due to different physical properties, and high costs. In this work, additive manufacturing (3D printing) is used to produce a conductive, composite flexible sensor. Its electrical response was tested based on various physical conditions. Finite element analysis (FEA) was used to characterise its deformation and stress behaviour for optimisation to achieve functionality and durability. Also, a nonlinear regression model was developed for the sensor{\textquoteright}s performance.",
author = "Nnadi, {Sylvester Ndidiamaka} and Ivor Ajadalu and Amir Rahmani and Aliyu Aliyu and Khaled Elgeneidy and Allahyar Montazeri and Behnaz Sohani",
year = "2024",
month = jul,
day = "11",
doi = "10.3390/robotics13070103",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "Robotics",
issn = "2218-6581",
publisher = "MDPI - Open Access Publishing",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Development, Experimental, and Numerical Characterisation of Novel Flexible Strain Sensors for Soft Robotics Applications

AU - Nnadi, Sylvester Ndidiamaka

AU - Ajadalu, Ivor

AU - Rahmani, Amir

AU - Aliyu, Aliyu

AU - Elgeneidy, Khaled

AU - Montazeri, Allahyar

AU - Sohani, Behnaz

PY - 2024/7/11

Y1 - 2024/7/11

N2 - Medical and agricultural robots that interact with living tissue or pick fruit require tactile and flexible sensors to minimise or eliminate damage. Until recently, research has focused on the development of robots made of rigid materials, such as metal or plastic. Due to their complex configuration, poor spatial adaptability and low flexibility, rigid robots are not fully applicable in some special environments such as limb rehabilitation, fragile objects gripping, human–machine interaction, and locomotion. All these should be done in an accurate and safe manner for them to be useful. However, the design and manufacture of soft robot parts that interact with living tissue or fragile objects is not as straightforward. Given that hyper-elasticity and conductivity are involved, conventional (subtractive) manufacturing can result in wasted materials (which are expensive), incompatible parts due to different physical properties, and high costs. In this work, additive manufacturing (3D printing) is used to produce a conductive, composite flexible sensor. Its electrical response was tested based on various physical conditions. Finite element analysis (FEA) was used to characterise its deformation and stress behaviour for optimisation to achieve functionality and durability. Also, a nonlinear regression model was developed for the sensor’s performance.

AB - Medical and agricultural robots that interact with living tissue or pick fruit require tactile and flexible sensors to minimise or eliminate damage. Until recently, research has focused on the development of robots made of rigid materials, such as metal or plastic. Due to their complex configuration, poor spatial adaptability and low flexibility, rigid robots are not fully applicable in some special environments such as limb rehabilitation, fragile objects gripping, human–machine interaction, and locomotion. All these should be done in an accurate and safe manner for them to be useful. However, the design and manufacture of soft robot parts that interact with living tissue or fragile objects is not as straightforward. Given that hyper-elasticity and conductivity are involved, conventional (subtractive) manufacturing can result in wasted materials (which are expensive), incompatible parts due to different physical properties, and high costs. In this work, additive manufacturing (3D printing) is used to produce a conductive, composite flexible sensor. Its electrical response was tested based on various physical conditions. Finite element analysis (FEA) was used to characterise its deformation and stress behaviour for optimisation to achieve functionality and durability. Also, a nonlinear regression model was developed for the sensor’s performance.

U2 - 10.3390/robotics13070103

DO - 10.3390/robotics13070103

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

JO - Robotics

JF - Robotics

SN - 2218-6581

IS - 7

M1 - 103

ER -