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Home News

Sensor-based Prosthetic Skin Offers Sensitivity and Dexterity

by The O&P EDGE
October 30, 2023
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The prosthetic hand has soft skin sensors added to the palm. Photograph courtesy of Honda.

Smart, stretchable and highly sensitive, a new soft sensor developed by the University of British Columbia (UBC) and Honda researchers will have applications in robotics and prosthetics. A study describing the work was published this month.

When applied to the surface of a prosthetic arm or a robotic limb, the sensor skin provides touch sensitivity and dexterity, enabling tasks that can be difficult for machines, such as picking up a piece of soft fruit. The sensor is also soft to the touch, like human skin, which helps make human interactions safer and more lifelike.

“Our sensor can sense several types of forces, allowing a prosthetic or robotic arm to respond to tactile stimuli with dexterity and precision. For instance, the arm can hold fragile objects like an egg or a glass of water without crushing or dropping them,” said study author Mirza Saquib Sarwar, PhD. Sarwar created the sensor as part of his doctoral work in electrical and computer engineering at UBC’s faculty of applied science.

The sensor is primarily composed of silicone rubber, the same material used to make many skin special effects in movies. The team’s unique design gives it the ability to buckle and wrinkle, just like human skin.

“Our sensor uses weak electric fields to sense objects, even at a distance, much as touchscreens do. But unlike touchscreens, this sensor is supple and can detect forces into and along its surface. This unique combination is key to adoption of the technology for robots that are in contact with people,” said John Madden, PhD, senior study author and a professor of electrical and computer engineering who leads the Advanced Materials and Process Engineering Laboratory at UBC.

The UBC team developed the technology in collaboration with Frontier Robotics, Honda’s research institute. Honda has been developing humanoid robotics since the 1980s.

“Dr. Madden’s lab has significant expertise in flexible sensors and we’re happy to collaborate with this team in developing tactile sensors that can be applied to robots,” said Ishizaki Ryusuke, one of the study’s lead authors and chief engineer at Frontier Robotics.

The researchers say the new sensor is simple to fabricate, which makes it easy to scale to cover large surface areas and to manufacture large quantities.

“Human skin has a hundred times more sensing points on a fingertip than our technology does, making it easier to light a match or sew. As sensors continue to evolve to be more skin-like, and can also detect temperature and even damage, there is a need for robots to be smarter about which sensors to pay attention to and how to respond. Developments in sensors and artificial intelligence will need to go hand in hand.”

Editor’s note: This story was adapted from materials provided by UBC.

The study, “Touch, press and stroke: a soft capacitive sensor skin,” was published in Scientific Reports.

 

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