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Main Authors: Tugui, Codrin, Thakar, Tirth, Gogoj, Anatol, White, Alexander, Li, Ang Leo, Yin, Alexander, Pomianek, Edward, Duduta, Mihai
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.04352
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author Tugui, Codrin
Thakar, Tirth
Gogoj, Anatol
White, Alexander
Li, Ang Leo
Yin, Alexander
Pomianek, Edward
Duduta, Mihai
author_facet Tugui, Codrin
Thakar, Tirth
Gogoj, Anatol
White, Alexander
Li, Ang Leo
Yin, Alexander
Pomianek, Edward
Duduta, Mihai
contents Machines designed for operation in Space, as well as other extreme environments, need to be both resilient and adaptable when mission parameters change. Soft robots offer advantages in adaptability, but most lack resilience to the pressure and temperature extremes found as close as the Stratosphere. Dielectric elastomer actuators overcome some of those limitations when built as solid state compliant capacitors capable of converting electrical energy into mechanical work, but the elastomer resilience limits the device's operating window. Here we present a crosslinking mechanism for silicone elastomers under ultraviolet light using trimethyl(methylcyclopentadienyl)platinum(IV) as a catalyst to react hydrosilane to vinyl groups. The formation of carbon-carbon bonds enables fast processing under UV light and exceptional electro-mechanical performance in dielectric elastomer actuators. The material resilience advantage is demonstrated in controlled experiments at -40° and 120° C, as well as near vacuum, in comparison with state-of-the-art acrylic and silicone chemistries. Fully autonomous systems controlling grippers made with the novel silicone were integrated into payloads for high altitude balloon testing. Two stratospheric balloon missions were carried out and demonstrated DEAs as a viable soft robotic technology under space-like conditions (as high as 23.6 km elevation, at <0.05 atm and -55° C). The combinations of chemical building blocks and catalyst can be further expanded to address other challenges for silicones, including adhesion and additive manufacturing.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_04352
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Soft Robotic Demonstration in the Stratosphere
Tugui, Codrin
Thakar, Tirth
Gogoj, Anatol
White, Alexander
Li, Ang Leo
Yin, Alexander
Pomianek, Edward
Duduta, Mihai
Robotics
Materials Science
Machines designed for operation in Space, as well as other extreme environments, need to be both resilient and adaptable when mission parameters change. Soft robots offer advantages in adaptability, but most lack resilience to the pressure and temperature extremes found as close as the Stratosphere. Dielectric elastomer actuators overcome some of those limitations when built as solid state compliant capacitors capable of converting electrical energy into mechanical work, but the elastomer resilience limits the device's operating window. Here we present a crosslinking mechanism for silicone elastomers under ultraviolet light using trimethyl(methylcyclopentadienyl)platinum(IV) as a catalyst to react hydrosilane to vinyl groups. The formation of carbon-carbon bonds enables fast processing under UV light and exceptional electro-mechanical performance in dielectric elastomer actuators. The material resilience advantage is demonstrated in controlled experiments at -40° and 120° C, as well as near vacuum, in comparison with state-of-the-art acrylic and silicone chemistries. Fully autonomous systems controlling grippers made with the novel silicone were integrated into payloads for high altitude balloon testing. Two stratospheric balloon missions were carried out and demonstrated DEAs as a viable soft robotic technology under space-like conditions (as high as 23.6 km elevation, at <0.05 atm and -55° C). The combinations of chemical building blocks and catalyst can be further expanded to address other challenges for silicones, including adhesion and additive manufacturing.
title A Soft Robotic Demonstration in the Stratosphere
topic Robotics
Materials Science
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.04352