![]()
by
CSAIL MIT
Research & Innovation
News
October 3, 2016
Anyone who’s watched drone videos or an episode of BattleBots knows that robots can break – and often it’s because they don’t have the proper padding to protect themselves.
But this week researchers at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) will present a new method for 3-D printing soft materials that make robots safer, more resilient, and more precise in their movements – and that could be used to improve the durability of drones, phones, shoes, helmets and more.
The team’s “Programmable Viscoelastic Material” (PVM) technique allows users to program every single part of a 3D-printed object to the exact levels of stiffness and elasticity they want, depending on the task they need for it.
For example, after 3-D printing a cube robot that moves by bouncing, the researchers outfitted it with shock-absorbing “skins” that reduce the amount of energy it transfers to the ground 250 percent.
“That reduction makes all the difference for preventing a rotor from breaking off of a drone or a sensor from cracking when it hits the floor,” says CSAIL director Daniela Rus, who oversaw the project and co-wrote a related paper. “These materials allow us to 3-D print robots with visco-elastic properties that can be inputted by the user at print-time as part of the fabrication process.”
The skins also allow the robot to land nearly four times more precisely, suggesting that similar shock absorbers could be used to help extend the lifespan of delivery drones like the ones being developed by Amazon and Google.
The new paper will be presented at next week’s IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS) in Korea. It was written by Rus alongside three postdoctoral associates: lead authors Robert MacCurdy and Jeffrey Lipton, as well as third author Shuguang Li.
There are many reasons for dampers, from controlling the notes of a piano, to keeping car tires on the ground, to protecting structures like radio towers from storms.
The most common damper materials are “viscoelastics” like rubber and plastic that have both solid and liquid qualities. Viscoelastics are cheap, compact and easy to find, but are generally only commercially available in specific sizes and at specific damping levels because of how time-consuming it is to customize them.
The solution, the team realized, was 3-D printing. By being able to deposit materials with different mechanical properties into a design, 3-D printing allows users to “program” material to their exact needs for every single part of an object.
“It’s hard to customize soft objects using existing fabrication methods, since you need to do injection moulding or some other industrial process,” says Lipton. “3-D printing opens up more possibilities and lets us ask the question, ‘can we make things we couldn’t make before?”
Using a standard 3-D printer, the team used a solid, a liquid and a flexible rubber-like material called TangoBlack+ to print both the cube and its skins. The PVM process is related to Rus’ previous 3-D printed robotics work, with an inkjet depositing droplets of different material layer-by-layer and then using UV light to solidify the non-liquids.
The cube robot includes a rigid body, two motors, a microcontroller, battery and IMU sensors. Four layers of looped metal strip serve as the springs that propel the cube.
“By combining multiple materials to achieve properties that are outside the range of the base material, this work pushes the envelope of what’s possible to print,” says Hod Lipson, a professor of engineering at Columbia University and co-author of “Fabricated: The New World of 3-D Printing.” “On top of that, being able to do this in a single print-job raises the bar for additive manufacturing.”
Rus says that PVMs could have many other protective uses, including shock-absorbing running shoes and headgear. By damping the motion brought about by robots’ motors, for example, PVMs are not only able to protect sensitive parts like cameras and sensors, but can also actually make the robots easier to control.
“Being able to program different regions of an object has important implications for things like helmets,” says MacCurdy. “You could have certain parts made of materials that are comfortable for your head to rest on, and other shock-absorbing materials for the sections that are most likely to be impacted in a collision.”
This work was supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation.
Read the research paper here.
CSAIL MIT The Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory – known as CSAIL – is the largest research laboratory at MIT and one of the world’s most important centers of information technology research. .. read more
3D printing CSAIL robotics
Research & Innovation
Business & Finance
Health & Medicine
Politics, Law & Society
Arts & Entertainment
Education & DIY
Events
Military & Defense
Exploration & Mining
Mapping & Surveillance
Enviro. & Agriculture
Aerial
Automotive
Industrial Automation
Consumer & Household
Space
latest posts popular reported elsewhere
Drone learns to see in zero-gravity
by
Guido de Croon
A drone with insect-inspired folding wings
by
Linda Seward, NCCR Robotics
Gangyuan Jing , Rico Jonschkowski , Matthew Gombolay , Dorsa Sadigh - RSS 2016 Posters
by
Audrow Nash
Replicable and measureable robotics research: Back to the basics of the scientific method
by
Fabio Bonsignorio
GoPro unveils long-awaited Karma stabilized drone system and kit
by
Frank Tobe
$60 million committed to Smart Cities Initiative
by
the National Science Foundation (NSF)
Farewell to Vic Scheinman, inventor of the modern robot arm
by
Silicon Valley Robotics
46 research reports analyze the robotics industry and autonomous vehicles
by
Frank Tobe
The Robot Economy: Interview with Alan Manning
by
SPARC
XoSoft: Intelligent trousers designed to assist people with limited mobility
by
Jesús Ortiz, Adam de Eyto, Edina Gallos
latest posts popular reported elsewhere
The evolution of assembly lines: A brief historyRobots can successfully imitate human motions in the operating roomHow do self-driving cars work?Farming with robotsThe Robot Economy: Interview with Alan ManningReplicable and measureable robotics research: Back to the basics of the scientific methodWhat’s new in robotics this week: British Standards Institute releases guidelines for ethical robot designCubli – A cube that can jump up, balance, and walk across your deskA practical look at latency in robotics: The importance of metrics and operating systemsSweep: a low cost LiDAR sensor for smart consumer products
latest posts popular reported elsewhere
Umamaheswar Duvvuri, MD: Surgical robotics – past, present and future | CMU RI Seminar
Tesla drivers wake up to a serious upgrade | Bloomberg
Victor Scheinman, assembly line robot inventor, dies at 73 | The New York Times
Artificial intelligence software is booming. But why now? | The New York Times
Do no harm, don’t discriminate: official guidance issued on robot ethics | The Guardian
Brenna D. Argall: Human Autonomy through Robotics Autonomy | CMU RI Seminar
Autopilot cited in death of Chinese Tesla driver | The New York Times
Uber starts self-driving car pickups in Pittsburgh | TechCrunch
Surgeons use robot to operate inside eye in world first
The Head of CMU’s Robotics Lab Says Self-Driving Cars Are ‘Not Even Close’
Japan to develop 3-D maps for self-driving cars- Nikkei Asian Review
No Sailors Needed: Robot Sailboats Scour the Oceans for Data
Boris Sofman & Hanns Tappeiner: The Journey to Consumer Robotics | CMU RI Seminar
Drive.ai uses deep learning to teach self-driving cars – and to give them a voice
Baidu and Nvidia to Build Artificial Intelligence Platform for Self-Driving Cars
How Tech Giants Are Devising Real Ethics for Artificial Intelligence
Robot Tractor Draws Crowds on Debut at Iowa Farm Show
3D Print Your Own Breakfast
Inside the Robot-Run Genetics Lab of Tomorrow (Just Watch Your Step)
Interview: How to build a lionfish-killing robot
RoboThespian
January 10, 2015
A dedicated jobs board for the global robotics community.
Sr. Machine Vision / SLAM Engineer - Mayfield RoboticsRobotic Engineering Leader - ConfidentialTechnical Lead (Robotics Software Development) - Advanced Remanufacturing and Technology CentreSenior – Principal Development Scientist (Robotics Development) - Advanced Remanufacturing and Technology CentreDevelopment Engineer – Senior (Robotic Software Development) - Advanced Remanufacturing and Technology Center