Electronic 'Skin' Creates Robots From Ordinary Objects

Electronic 'Skin' Creates Robots From Ordinary Objects

Developed for a NASA project, the soft sheets full of high-tech gear can turn almost anything into a versatile automaton.

ByNick Lunn
September 19, 2018
2 min read

When NASA put out a call for soft robotic technologies, Rebecca Kramer-Bottiglio and her team at Yale University replied with something remarkable: robotic skins that can wrap around everyday objects, turning almost anything into a moving, grasping robot.

Described this week in Science Robotics, the skins are made of pliable elastic sheets with moving actuators and sensors on one side. They are designed to be reusable and modular, allowing them to be combined in a variety of ways to create different movements and uses, Kramer-Bottiglio explains via email.

In tests in the lab, Kramer-Bottiglio and her team wrapped the skin around the legs of a stuffed animal, and the toy horse lurched forward in an awkward gallop. A foam tube wrapped with a skin was able to inch forward like a worm. And a piece of skin connecting two pieces of cardboard could contract, turning the object into a rudimentary gripper.

I'm Delighted I Can Do That, Dave

In unpredictable environments like outer space, where unforeseen problems can arise, this diversity gives the skins a creative advantage over traditional robots that are only designed for a limited amount of activities. (Also see intimate pictures of Sophia, a remarkably human-like robot.)

Sensors embedded along with the actuators can give helpful feedback as well—wearable skins placed on the back of a man were able to give feedback on his posture.

In the future, Kramer-Bottiglio hopes that the skins will be able to learn by themselves using data from the sensors, giving them the ability to adapt on their own, especially when wrapped around moldable objects like clay.

“Given the design-on-the-fly nature of this approach, it's unlikely that a robot created using robotic skins will perform any one task optimally,” Kramer-Bottiglio says. “However, the goal is not optimization, but rather diversity of applications."

Related: Vintage NASA Photos

Ed White in the pilot's seat of Gemini 4
Ed White taking the first space walk in 1965
Buzz Aldrin taking the first self portrait in space
Ed White floating outside the Gemini 4 in 1965
the first color photo of the Earth
Water Cunningham aboard the Apollo 7
the Florida peninsula from the Apollo 7 in 1968
the Apollo 8 lifting off into space in 1968
craters on the moon in 1968
the Earthrise as seen from the moon
the Command Module re-entering the Earth's atmosphere
astronaut David Scott looking at Earth from Apollo 9
a panorama of western rim of Mendeleev Basin taken from Apollo 10
Apollo 11 lifting off
Buzz Aldrin taking his first steps on the moon in 1969
astronaut Alan Bean with the reflection of Pete Conrad in his visor in 1969
astronaut Eugene Cernan testing the lunar rover on the moon in 1972
Harrison Schmitt on the moon with the American flag
the Earth eclipsing the sun in 1969
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This 1946 image of Earth was the first photograph taken in space.
Photograph by Clyde Holliday, courtesy Bloomsbury Auctions

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