Kirigami skins make a simple soft actuator crawl

Citation:

Ahmad Rafsanjani, Zhang, Yuerou , Liu, Bangyuan , Rubinstein, Shmuel M. , and Bertoldi, Katia . 2018. “Kirigami Skins Make A Simple Soft Actuator Crawl”. Science Robotics, 3, 15, Pp. 7555. http://robotics.sciencemag.org/content/3/15/eaar7555.

Abstract:

Bioinspired soft machines made of highly deformable materials are enabling a variety of innovative applications, yet their locomotion typically requires several actuators that are independently activated. We harnessed kirigami principles to significantly enhance the crawling capability of a soft actuator. We designed highly stretchable kirigami surfaces in which mechanical instabilities induce a transformation from flat sheets to 3D-textured surfaces akin to the scaled skin of snakes. First, we showed that this transformation was accompanied by a dramatic change in the frictional properties of the surfaces. Then, we demonstrated that, when wrapped around an extending soft actuator, the buckling-induced directional frictional properties of these surfaces enabled the system to efficiently crawl.

Last updated on 04/06/2021