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Laser-assisted failure recovery for dielectric elastomer actuators in aerial robots. | LitMetric

Laser-assisted failure recovery for dielectric elastomer actuators in aerial robots.

Sci Robot

Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Insects can remain agile even after serious injuries, but most robots cannot adapt to damage as effectively.
  • Dielectric elastomer actuators (DEAs) can mimic muscle-like movement in robots, yet they often fail due to localized dielectric breakdowns, which affects their performance and durability.
  • Researchers developed durable DEAs that can withstand over 100 punctures and introduced a laser repair method to fix critical failures, resulting in an aerial robot that maintains stability and precision in flight despite significant damage.

Article Abstract

Insects maintain remarkable agility after incurring severe injuries or wounds. Although robots driven by rigid actuators have demonstrated agile locomotion and manipulation, most of them lack animal-like robustness against unexpected damage. Dielectric elastomer actuators (DEAs) are a class of muscle-like soft transducers that have enabled nimble aerial, terrestrial, and aquatic robotic locomotion comparable to that of rigid actuators. However, unlike muscles, DEAs suffer local dielectric breakdowns that often cause global device failure. These local defects severely limit DEA performance, lifetime, and size scalability. We developed DEAs that can endure more than 100 punctures while maintaining high bandwidth (>400 hertz) and power density (>700 watt per kilogram)-sufficient for supporting energetically expensive locomotion such as flight. We fabricated electroluminescent DEAs for visualizing electrode connectivity under actuator damage. When the DEA suffered severe dielectric breakdowns that caused device failure, we demonstrated a laser-assisted repair method for isolating the critical defects and recovering performance. These results culminate in an aerial robot that can endure critical actuator and wing damage while maintaining similar accuracy in hovering flight. Our work highlights that soft robotic systems can embody animal-like agility and resilience-a critical biomimetic capability for future robots to interact with challenging environments.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/scirobotics.adf4278DOI Listing

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