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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ruiz, Fernando, Arrue, Begona, Ollero, Anibal
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.08942
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author Ruiz, Fernando
Arrue, Begona
Ollero, Anibal
author_facet Ruiz, Fernando
Arrue, Begona
Ollero, Anibal
contents Research in soft manipulators has significantly enhanced object grasping capabilities, thanks to their adaptability to various shapes and sizes. Applying this technology to on-orbit servicing, especially during the capture and containment stages of active space debris removal missions, might offer a secure, adaptable, and cost-effective solution compared to the trend of increasing the degrees of freedom and complexity of the manipulator (e.g. ClearSpace, Astroscale). This work aims to conduct an experimental proof of concept, for which challenges such as radiation, vacuum, and microgravity are significant, but the predominant issue is ensuring effective operation in the extreme temperature swings, where flexible materials may exhibit cryogenic crystallization or drastic shifts in their elasticity. This work addresses this challenge through an initial stage of analytical modeling of the thermal dynamics inside the manipulator in orbit; which is then used for the development of a first experimental prototype tested with liquid nitrogen and heat guns. The multi-layered design for Low Earth Orbit (LEO) leverages the properties of TPU at low infill rates for lightweight inherent flexibility, silicone rubber ensuring structural integrity, PTFE (Teflon) for unparalleled thermal stability, and aerogel for insulation. The tendon-actuated servo-driven gripper is tested in the laboratory by varying the shape and size of objects during the grasping. The results, based on servomotor force metrics to assess the flexible manipulator's adaptability and object capture efficiency across temperature changes, affirm the concept's viability. Forces increase up to 220$\%$ in cryogenic conditions and decrease by no more than 50$\%$ at high temperatures.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2311_08942
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Thermally-Resilient Soft Gripper for On-Orbit Operations
Ruiz, Fernando
Arrue, Begona
Ollero, Anibal
Systems and Control
Research in soft manipulators has significantly enhanced object grasping capabilities, thanks to their adaptability to various shapes and sizes. Applying this technology to on-orbit servicing, especially during the capture and containment stages of active space debris removal missions, might offer a secure, adaptable, and cost-effective solution compared to the trend of increasing the degrees of freedom and complexity of the manipulator (e.g. ClearSpace, Astroscale). This work aims to conduct an experimental proof of concept, for which challenges such as radiation, vacuum, and microgravity are significant, but the predominant issue is ensuring effective operation in the extreme temperature swings, where flexible materials may exhibit cryogenic crystallization or drastic shifts in their elasticity. This work addresses this challenge through an initial stage of analytical modeling of the thermal dynamics inside the manipulator in orbit; which is then used for the development of a first experimental prototype tested with liquid nitrogen and heat guns. The multi-layered design for Low Earth Orbit (LEO) leverages the properties of TPU at low infill rates for lightweight inherent flexibility, silicone rubber ensuring structural integrity, PTFE (Teflon) for unparalleled thermal stability, and aerogel for insulation. The tendon-actuated servo-driven gripper is tested in the laboratory by varying the shape and size of objects during the grasping. The results, based on servomotor force metrics to assess the flexible manipulator's adaptability and object capture efficiency across temperature changes, affirm the concept's viability. Forces increase up to 220$\%$ in cryogenic conditions and decrease by no more than 50$\%$ at high temperatures.
title Thermally-Resilient Soft Gripper for On-Orbit Operations
topic Systems and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.08942