| Literature DB >> 29707065 |
Jahan Zeb Gul1, Memoon Sajid1, Muhammad Muqeet Rehman2, Ghayas Uddin Siddiqui1, Imran Shah1, Kyung-Hwan Kim1, Jae-Wook Lee1, Kyung Hyun Choi1.
Abstract
Soft robots have received an increasing attention due to their advantages of high flexibility and safety for human operators but the fabrication is a challenge. Recently, 3D printing has been used as a key technology to fabricate soft robots because of high quality and printing multiple materials at the same time. Functional soft materials are particularly well suited for soft robotics due to a wide range of stimulants and sensitive demonstration of large deformations, high motion complexities and varied multi-functionalities. This review comprises a detailed survey of 3D printing in soft robotics. The development of key 3D printing technologies and new materials along with composites for soft robotic applications is investigated. A brief summary of 3D-printed soft devices suitable for medical to industrial applications is also included. The growing research on both 3D printing and soft robotics needs a summary of the major reported studies and the authors believe that this review article serves the purpose.Entities:
Keywords: 211 Scaffold / Tissue engineering / Drug delivery; 3D Printing; 60 New topics/Others; biomimetic; functional materials; soft robots
Year: 2018 PMID: 29707065 PMCID: PMC5917433 DOI: 10.1080/14686996.2018.1431862
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Technol Adv Mater ISSN: 1468-6996 Impact factor: 8.090
Figure 1.Examples of printed soft robots and soft devices. (a) Pre-strained polystyrene substrate with inkjet-printed hinges made of carbon black ink. (b) 3D-printed jumping soft robot. (c) 3D stereolithography-printed bat with curvature time lapse. (d) 4D-printed composite with swellableable hinges. (e) 4D-printed unfolded box composed of shape memory polymers. (f) A jumping soft robot with 3D-printed mould. (g) 4D printing of hydrogel composites for soft robotic applications. (h) A snake inspired soft robot with 3D-printed mould. (i) Multi-step 3D-printed octobot. (j) Pneumatic actuator for spinal compression and flextion with 3D-printed mould. (k) Embedded 3D printing of soft strain sensor for soft robots. (l) Multicore print head shell capacitive sensor.
Figure 2.(a) Multi-material 3D printing system by Advanced Micro Mechatronics (AMM) Research Lab, Jeju National University, South Korea. (b) Photograph of the AMM’s multi-material 3D printing system. (c) Soft omnidirectional actuator by AMM Lab. (d) (i) Fabricated soft-bot actuation of each leg at different time intervals. (ii) Model of actuation to generate movement at different time intervals. (iii) Finite-element displacement simulation results of one complete actuation cycle. (iv) Finite element strain simulation of one complete actuation cycle.
Summary of 3D printing technology with respect to soft robots.
| Mechanism | Robot part | State of starting material | Layer creation technique | Materials | Size | Advantage | Disadvantage | Application | Sub-Heading number | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stereolithography (SLA) | Bio-bot arrays | Layer by layer | Poly(ethylene glycol) | Less resin material, large build volume, Precise control, Rapid polymerization | Post-curing, warping, brittle parts with a tacky surface, support required, little choice of material, unused material is toxic | Miniaturized Walking | I | [ | ||
| Diacrylate (PEGDA) | ||||||||||
| Biological Machines | ||||||||||
| Multi-material cantilevers | Layer by layer | Poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA) and acrylic-PEG-collagen (PC) mixtures | 2 × 2 × 4 mm | [ | ||||||
| Actuator | Bottom up approach | Elastomeric precursor; Spot-E resin, Spot-A | 40.0 × 71.1 mm2 | Octopus Tentacles | [ | |||||
| Inkjet Printing | Bellows actuators, gear pumps, soft grippers and a hexapod Robot, | Liquid | Multi-material layer by layer printing | Tangoblack+ | 14 × 9 × 7 cm | Hydraulically actuated robots | Ii | [ | ||
| Complete robot | Multi-material UV-curable printing | Urethane and epoxy | 80 × 5 × 5 mm | Tri-legged soft bot with spider Mimicry | [ | |||||
| Mould | ABS and silicon rubber | Caterpillar-inspired soft-bodied rolling robot | [ | |||||||
| Selective laser sintering (SLS) | Bellow actuators | Top-Down | Elastic silicone material | No support required | Soft robotic hand | Iii | [ | |||
| Flexure hinges | Polyamide (PA 12, Nylon) | 0.1 mm × 0.5 mm | Soft Robot Kinematics of snake | [ | ||||||
| DIW | Extensible sensing skin | Silicone elastomer, hydrogel elastomers, polyacrylamide etc. | 3.75 × 3.75 cm | Unable to fabricate continuous fibre-reinforced composites | Tactile Machines with kinesthetic sense | Iv | [ | |||
| SDM | Cockroach Limbs | Viscoelastic polyurethane | 120 mm × 120 mm × 50 mm | Biomimetic Components | V | [ | ||||
| Small robot limbs | Viscoelastic polyurethane | – | Biomimetic Robotic Mechanisms | [ | ||||||
| Fingers of robot | Two-part industrial polyurethanes | Robust compliant grasper | [ | |||||||
| Hexapedal Robots | Viscoelastic polyurethane, polyester fibres and low melting temperature wax | 16 cm | Performance and locomotion Dynamics of insects | [ | ||||||
| Fingers of Grasper | Polyurethane elastomer | 116 cm3 | Soft, Atraumatic and Deployable surgical grasper | [ | ||||||
| Fused deposition modelling (FDM) | Actuator | Layer by layer | Silicone elastomer | 50 × 20 × 40 mm | Soft robot prototypes | Vi | [ | |||
| 3D structures | Layer by layer | Nafion | 5 mm × 10 mm × 0.5 mm | Macro-scale soft robotic systems | [ | |||||
| Actuator modules | Silicon rubber elastomer | – | Soft snake | [ | ||||||
| Flexible Fingers | Poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) sheets | – | Soft prosthetic Finger | [ | ||||||
| Soft pneumatic actuators | Thermoplastic elastomer filament ninjaflex (ninjatek, PA) | 150 mm × 25 mm × 11 mm | Soft Robotic applications | [ | ||||||
| 3D Printing | Fugitive (Pluronic F127) and catalytic inks | Entirely soft octobot with embedded electronics | [ | |||||||
| Moulds | Elastomeric silicon | Pneumatic networks for soft robotics | [ | |||||||
| Moulds | ABS | 15 cm | Robotic Tentacles | [ | ||||||
| Soft Actuators, main frame | Layer by layer | ABS Plastic | 30 × 10 mm | Rehabilitation of spinalized rodents | [ | |||||
| Whole body | Multi-material printing | Tangoplus and veroclear | 8 cm | Mimicking of caterpillar motion | [ | |||||
| Soft Skin | Multi-material printing | Tangoplus | 173 cm3 | Safe human-robot interaction | [ | |||||
| Robot Body | Multi-material printing | Combustion-powered robot | [ | |||||||
| Outer mould, lid, model core | Layer by layer | Silicon rubber | 0.45 m × 0.19 m × 0.13 m | Hydraulic autonomous soft robotic fish | [ | |||||
| Mould, passive wheel, valve holders, tail enclosure | Silicon rubber | Dynamics of a fluidic soft robot | [ | |||||||
| Mould | Silicon rubber | 2.5 × 2.5 × 11 cm | Soft Robotic Gripper | [ | ||||||
| Softworms | Deformable rubber-like Polymer | Bio-inspiration soft robots | [ |
Figure 3.3D Printing techniques used to fabricate soft robots. (i) A liquid resin is selectively photo-polymerized in the process of SLA by a laser. (ii) Inkjet printing is similar to SLA in many ways with a difference that a movable inkjet head is used in this technique to apply a photopolymer being activated by a UV lamp. (iii) The powder of metal material is rolled across a build platform and a laser is directed into the powder followed by rolling the powder over the top of as-deposited layer and this process keeps on repeating till the desired 3D object is completely fabricated. (iv) DIW is an alternative printing technique to FDM for additive manufacturing of desired objects under ambient conditions in which ink passes through a nozzle in a controlled manner. (v) Shape deposition modelling technology consists of several steps including deposition. The material in heterogeneous deposition is changed between each deposition process. (vi) Soft materials are printed in the form of a continuous filament in FDM method with a single layer being deposited at a time.
Figure 4.3D-printed bio-medical soft robot. (a) 3D CAD model of the carotid artery. (b) 3D-printed scaled version of the carotid artery. (c) Traveling of omnidirectional robot inside carotid artery without controlled steering. (d) Demonstration of static steering of omnidirectional robot inside carotid artery. (e) Traveling of omnidirectional robot inside carotid artery [4].
3D-printed in vitro and in vivo soft structures.
| Category | Type | Function | Soft material | 3D printing technology | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exoskeletal Implant | Rehabilitation | Neoprene | 3D-Printed mould | [ | |
| Wearable exoskeleton | Therapy and monitoring | Silicone rubber | 3D-Printed mould | [ | |
| Electronic soft skin | Physical senses in implants | Silicone | Direct ink writing | [ | |
| Electronic soft skin | Physical senses in implants | ABS/PDMS/SMA | 3D-Printed Scaffold | [ | |
| Life-like organs on a chip | Drug discovery and testing | Real organs cultured tissues | Multi-material 3D printing | [ | |
| Tracheobronchial implants | Treatment of bronchial disorder | PCL and Polyester | SLS printing | [ | |
| Soft robotic sleeve for heart | Supports and strengthens functionality | Silicone | 3D-printed alignment fixture | [ | |
| Bio-morph cantilever | Organ repair | Cardiac cell sheet/hydrogel PEGDA | Direct 3D printing | [ | |
| Muscle powered biological machines | Muscle repair or replacement | Cultured muscle cells, PEGDA | 3D-printed mould and skeleton | [ |