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An Electronically Perceptive Bioinspired Soft Wet-Adhesion Actuator with Carbon Nanotube-Based Strain Sensors
  • Lee, Heon Joon ;
  • Baik, Sangyul ;
  • Hwang, Gui Won ;
  • Song, Jin Ho ;
  • Kim, Da Wan ;
  • Park, Bo Yong ;
  • Min, Hyeongho ;
  • Kim, Jung Kyu ;
  • Koh, Je Sung ;
  • Yang, Tae Heon ;
  • Pang, Changhyun
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Publication Year
2021-09-28
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Citation
ACS Nano, Vol.15, pp.14137-14148
Keyword
actuatorbiomimeticscarbon nanotubestrain sensorwet adhesion
Mesh Keyword
Adhesive systemsCenter of gravityIrregular surfaceStrain distributionsStrain sensorsSurface shapeTurbid waterWet adhesionElectronicsNanotubes, Carbon
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Materials Science (all)Engineering (all)Physics and Astronomy (all)
Abstract
The development of bioinspired switchable adhesive systems has promising solutions in various industrial/medical applications. Switchable and perceptive adhesion regardless of the shape or surface shape of the object is still challenging in dry and aquatic surroundings. We developed an electronic sensory soft adhesive device that recapitulates the attaching, mechanosensory, and decision-making capabilities of a soft adhesion actuator. The soft adhesion actuator of an artificial octopus sucker may precisely control its robust attachment against surfaces with various topologies in wet environments as well as a rapid detachment upon deflation. Carbon nanotube-based strain sensors are three-dimensionally coated onto the irregular surface of the artificial octopus sucker to mimic nerve-like functions of an octopus and identify objects via patterns of strain distribution. An integration with machine learning complements decision-making capabilities to predict the weight and center of gravity for samples with diverse shapes, sizes, and mechanical properties, and this function may be useful in turbid water or fragile environments, where it is difficult to utilize vision.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/32251
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.1c05130
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
We gratefully acknowledge support from the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF-2019R1C1C1008730) and the Korea Health Technology R&D Project (grant HP20C0078). This work also was supported by the R&D program of the Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy (No. 20016252, Development of a high-performance multimodal electronic skin sensor of hybrid-type and a scalable module for robot manipulation).
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Koh, Jesung 고제성
Department of Mechanical Engineering
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