| Literature DB >> 34277717 |
Kejun Hu1, Kanty Rabenorosoa1, Morvan Ouisse1.
Abstract
Shape memory alloys (SMAs) are a group of metallic alloys capable of sustaining large inelastic strains that can be recovered when subjected to a specific process between two distinct phases. Regarding their unique and outstanding properties, SMAs have drawn considerable attention in various domains and recently became appropriate candidates for origami robots, that require bi-directional rotational motion actuation with limited operational space. However, longitudinal motion-driven actuators are frequently investigated and commonly mentioned, whereas studies in SMA-based rotational motion actuation is still very limited in the literature. This work provides a review of different research efforts related to SMA-based actuators for bi-directional rotational motion (BRM), thus provides a survey and classification of current approaches and design tools that can be applied to origami robots in order to achieve shape-changing. For this purpose, analytical tools for description of actuator behaviour are presented, followed by characterisation and performance prediction. Afterward, the actuators' design methods, sensing, and controlling strategies are discussed. Finally, open challenges are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: bi-directional rotational motion; modeling; origami robot; shape memory alloy; shape-changing
Year: 2021 PMID: 34277717 PMCID: PMC8283262 DOI: 10.3389/frobt.2021.678486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Robot AI ISSN: 2296-9144
Comparison of actuators performance, inspired from Bhandari et al. (2012), Mohd Jani et al. (2014), Wang et al. (2018).
| Actuator type | Stress (MPa) | Strain (%) | Efficiency (%) | Bandwidth (Hz) | Work density (J/cm3) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NiTi SMA | 200 | 10 | 3 | 3 | 10 |
| Piezoceramic | 35 | 0.2 | 50 | 5,000 | 0.035 |
| Single crystal piezoelectric | 300 | 1.7 | 90 | 5,800 | 2.55 |
| Human muscle | 0.007–0.8 | 1–100 | 35 | 2–173 | 0.035 |
| Hydraulic | 20 | 50 | 80 | 4 | 5 |
| Pneumatic | 0.7 | 50 | 90 | 20 | 0.175 |
| Ionic polymer-metal composites | 0.3 | 40 | 30 | 0.1–100 | 0.0024 |
| Dielectric electro-active polymer | 2 | 100–380 | 60–90 | 1–10 k | 3.4 |
FIGURE 1Diversity of SMA-Based origami robots. Origami robots arranged by the number of actuators: (A) A deformable wheel robot (Lee et al., 2013). (B) An inchworm-inspired crawling robot (Koh and Cho, 2013). (C) Different versions of a bi-modal locomotion origami robot of Paik’s group (Zhakypov et al., 2015; Zhakypov et al., 2017; Zhakypov and Paik, 2018). (D) A self-deployable lifting structure (Wood et al., 2016). (E) A “shape switching” module with controllable stiffness (Kim J. et al., 2015). (F) A “2D3D” shape-morphing system (Hawkes et al., 2010).
FIGURE 2(A) An example of modeling of 1D stress-strain-temperature constitutive behavior of SMA. Shape memory effect: (0) to (4), pseudoelastic loop at constant high temperature: (5) to (10), the hysteretical behaviors are different according to the different temperatures. The figure is inspired by (Shaw, 2002). (B) An example of Brinson’s phase diagram, the figure is inspired by (Brinson, 1993).
FIGURE 3Examples of stress-strain relation of shape memory effect: (A–C) and of pseudoelastic behavior: (D,E), the figure is inspired by (Saputo et al., 2020).
FIGURE 4Examples of elementary SMA for uni-directional rotational motion: (A) Normal-motion-driven SMA element; (B) Bending-motion-driven SMA element; (C) Torsional-motion-driven SMA element.
FIGURE 5Data report of performance of SMA-based BRM actuators from literature: (A) shows the relationship between the elements dimension and bi-directional motion range of actuators. Colors corresponds to actuator types. Surrounding colors show the boundaries of existing prototypes: For given angle, L-SMA require larger values in terms of SMA lengths; according to the same diameter/thickness of SMAs, T-SMAs offer larger angles than B-SMAs. Publishing-time according to the presented works is provided on the (B).
Summary of existing SMA-based actuation system for BRM.
| Elementary SMA type | Dimension | Performance | Heating and cooling | Model | Sensing and controlling | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| D | L | MR | OT | CM | TS | MS | ||||
| L-SMA | — | 80 | 90 | — | JH | NAC | LRM/BM | MOSFET | TM | VA |
| L-SMA | 0.076 | 85 | 60 | — | JH | NAC | — | PID | — | RE |
| T-SMA | 0.254 | — | 20 | — | JH | NAC | LRM/BM | — | — | RE |
| T-SMA | 0.038 | — | 20 | — | JH | NAC | — | — | — | RE |
| T-SMA | 0.38 | 736 | 30 | — | JH | FAC | — | PID | — | RE |
| T-SMA | 0.25 | 40 | 90 | 4 | EH | NAC | EXP-driven | — | — | — |
| T-SMA | 1 | 753 | 200 | — | JH | — | — | — | — | IP |
| L-SMA | 0.035 | 385 | 80 | 2 | JH | NAC | LRM/BM | PWM-PID | TC | RE |
| L-SMA | 0.025 | 550 | 31 | — | JH | NAC | — | — | — | RE |
| L-SMA | 0.25 | 370 | 30 | — | JH | NAC | LRM/BM | PI | — | RE |
| L-SMA | 1 | 700 | 60 | 1.4 | JH | NAC | EXP-driven | SMC | — | — |
| L-SMA | 0.2 | 500 | 40 | — | JH | NAC | LRM/BM | Open-loop | — | RE |
| L-SMA | 0.2 | 150 | 14 | 2 | JH | PEC | IM | Close-loop | — | RE |
| L-SMA | 0.2 | 500 | 20 | 20 | JH | NAC | LRM/BM | SMC | RE | |
| L-SMA | 0.2 | — | 160 | 0.1 | JH | NAC | — | — | — | — |
| L-SMA | 0.38 | 964.5 | 20 | 15 | JH | NAC | LRM/BM | PID | RE | |
| L-SMA | 0.125 | — | 14 | — | JH | NAC | — | PID | — | RE |
| L-SMA | 0.22 | — | 10 | 17 | JH | NAC | FEM | SMC | — | — |
| L-SMA | 0.15 | 100 | 120 | — | JH | — | LRM/BM | — | — | IP |
| B-SMA | 0.1 | 4.5 | 60 | 0.83 | EH | NAC | EXP-driven | Close-loop | IR camera | BS |
| B-SMA | 0.51 | 17 | 60 | 0.94 | JH | HS | — | Close-loop | — | AM |
| B-SMA | 0.2 | — | 50 | 0.37 | TEH | PEC | RLM | — | TC | VA |
| B-SMA | 0.05 | — | 80 | 0.04 | — | NAC | EXP-driven | — | — | — |
| B-SMA | 0.25 | 320 | 100 | 15 | JH | NAC | EXP-driven | PID | IR camera | RE |
| B-SMA | 0.15 | 190 | 90 | — | JH | — | — | — | — | IP |
| L-SMA | 0.2 | 76 | 240 | — | JH | NLC | — | — | — | IP |
| T-SMA | 0.5 | — | 40 | 10 | JH | NAC | LRM/BM | PI | TM | VA |
| T-SMA | 0.4 | 12 | 180 | — | JH | NAC | LRM/BM | — | IR camera | IP |
| T-SMA | 0.25 | 8 | 90 | — | JH | NAC | LRM/BM | — | — | IP |
L-SMA, B-SMA, T-SMA: SMA wire or linear spring elements, SMA Bending elements, SMA torsional element.
D, L (mm): SMA element’s diameter or thickness, element’s length.
MR, OT: motion range (degree), output torque (mNm) for BRM actuation system.
JH, EH, TEH, FAC, NAC, NLC, HS, PEC: Joule heating, external heater, Thompson effect heating, forced air convection, natural air convection, natural liquid convection, heat skin, Peltier effect cooling.
LRM/BM, RLM, IM, FEM, EXP-driven: Liang and Roger or Brinson model, Raniecki and Lexcellent model, Ikuta model, finite element model, model driven by experimental data.
CM, TS, MS: controlling methods, temperature sensing methods, motion sensing methods.
PID, SMC: proportional–integral–derivative controller, sliding mode controller.
TC, TM: thermocouple, thermomister.
RE, VA, IP, BS, AM: rotary encoder, video acquisition, image processing, micro-bending-sensor, accelerometer.
FIGURE 6Examples of BRM actuator using SMA wire element: (A) A mesoscale SMA actuator for cleaning the contaminated lenses of surgical cameras during minimally invasive robotic surgery (Liu et al., 2019); (B) A rotary servo driven by a coil form SMA wire, the shape “re-set” torque is provided by a torsional spring (Song, 2007); (C) An opening and closing door device capable of a two-way rotary motions using a combination of a SMA and SEA (superelastic alloy). The strip was biased passively by a PE element for position resetting (Tobushi et al., 2013).
FIGURE 7Examples of BRM actuator using SMA wire element: (A) A rotary modular using “antagonistic Linear SMA + pulley” design with a intermediary torsional spring (Guo et al., 2015); (B) A rotary modular using “antagonistic Linear SMA + optimized spring-slack element + pulley” design with compact arrangement of linear SMA (Lan et al., 2009); (C) A BRM actuator consists of four SMA wires embedded in a soft matrix. The actuator is capable of performing banding and twisting motion in opposite directions (Rodrigue et al., 2015b).
FIGURE 8Examples of BRM actuator using SMA bending element: (A) A prototype of “Robogamis,” a two-dof local motion robot using four pairs of thin-layer-form antagonistic SMA (Firouzeh and Paik, 2015); (B) A self-deployable structure with four hinge-like joints for BRM, four pairs of antagonistic thin-bending-rod form SMAs have been embedded (Wang et al., 2016); (C) A prototype of rotational micro-actuator for active endoscopy application with a pair of antagonistic bending cantilever form SMAs. A Peltier-effect-based heater and cooler has been integrated (Abadie et al., 2009).
FIGURE 9Examples of BRM actuator using SMA torsional element: (A) A meso-scale BRM modular embedded 2 antagonist torsional springs for surgical application (Sheng et al., 2017); (B) A meso-scale self-deployable paper-based open origami structure that capable of switching between 2D-3D state (Koh et al., 2014).
FIGURE 10An example of simulation results with 3D FEM frameworks for pure torsional SMA elements: (A) Torsional PE behavior of a centimetre-size SMA tube form actuator for different models (Abaqus) (Zhu et al., 2013). (B) Torsional PE behavior of millimetre-size SMA wire form actuators for different diameters (Abaqus), the figure is reproduced from Chapman et al. (2011).
FIGURE 11Example of active biased SMA performance tests: (A): motion range tests, the (B–D) presents the maximum of motion range. (B): maximum output stress tests, the F presents the maximum output stress of system at certain temperature. The Panel is inspired by Georges et al. (2012).
FIGURE 12A guideline for determination of activation method of SMA elementary actuator between Joule effect and Peltier effect (Abadie, 2000).