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Wearable haptic devices transmit information via touch receptors in the skin, yet devices located on parts of the body with high densities of receptors, such as fingertips and hands, impede interactions. Other locations that are well‐suited for wearables, such as the wrists and arms, suffer from lower perceptual sensitivity. The emergence of textile‐based wearable devices introduces new techniques of fabrication that can be leveraged to address these constraints and enable new modes of haptic interactions. This article formalizes the concept of “multiscale” interaction, an untapped paradigm for haptic wearables, enabling enhanced delivery of information via textile‐based haptic modules. In this approach, users choose the depth and detail of their haptic experiences by varying their interaction mode. Flexible prototyping methods enable multiscale haptic bands that provide both body‐scale interactions (on the forearm) and hand‐scale interactions (on the fingers and palm). A series of experiments assess participants’ ability to identify pressure states and spatial locations delivered by these bands across these interaction scales. A final experiment demonstrates the encoding of three‐bit information into prototypical multiscale interactions, showcasing the paradigm's efficacy. This research lays the groundwork for versatile haptic communication and wearable design, offering users the ability to select interaction modes for receiving information.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2025
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The recent development of soft fluidic analogs to electrical components aims to reduce the demand for rigid and bulky electromechanical valves and hard electronic controllers within soft robots. This ongoing effort is advanced in this work by creating sheet‐based fluidic diodes constructed from readily available flexible sheets of polymers and textiles using a layered fabrication approach amenable to manufacturing at scale. These sheet‐based fluidic diodes restrict reverse flow over a wide range of differential pressures—exhibiting a diodicity (the ratio of resistance to reverse vs forward flow) of approximately 100×—to address functional limitations exhibited by prior soft fluidic diodes. By harnessing the diode's highly unidirectional flow, soft devices capable of 1) facilitating the capture and storage of pressurized fluid, 2) performing Boolean operations using diode logic, 3) enabling binary encoding of circuits by preventing interactions between different pressurized input lines, and 4) converting oscillating input pressures to a direct current‐like, positively phased output are realized. This work exemplifies the use of fluidic diodes to achieve complex patterns of actuation and unique capabilities through embedded fluidic circuitry, enabling future development of sheet‐based systems—including wearable and assistive robots made from textiles—as well as other soft robotic devices.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2025
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Haptic feedback offers a useful mode of communication in visually or auditorily noisy environments. The adoption of haptic devices in our everyday lives, however, remains limited, motivating research on haptic wearables constructed from materials that enable comfortable and lightweight form factors. Textiles, a material class fitting these needs and already ubiquitous in clothing, have begun to be used in haptics, but reliance on arrays of electromechanical controllers detracts from the benefits that textiles offer. Here, we mitigate the requirement for bulky hardware by developing a class of wearable haptic textiles capable of delivering high-resolution information on the basis of embedded fluidic programming. The designs of these haptic textiles enable tailorable amplitudinal, spatial, and temporal control. Combining these capabilities, we demonstrate wearables that deliver spatiotemporal cues in four directions with an average user accuracy of 87%. Subsequent demonstrations of washability, repairability, and utility for navigational tasks exemplify the capabilities of our approach.more » « less
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Vibration is a widely used mode of haptic communication, as vibrotactile cues provide salient haptic notifications to users and are easily integrated into wearable or handheld devices. Fluidic textile-based devices offer an appealing platform for the incorporation of vibrotactile haptic feedback, as they can be integrated into clothing and other conforming and compliant wearables. Fluidically driven vibrotactile feedback has primarily relied on valves to regulate actuating frequencies in wearable devices. The mechanical bandwidth of such valves limits the range of frequencies that can be achieved, particularly in attempting to reach the higher frequencies realized with electromechanical vibration actuators ( > 100 Hz). In this paper, we introduce a soft vibrotactile wearable device, constructed entirely of textiles and capable of rendering vibration frequencies between 183 and 233 Hz with amplitudes ranging from 23 to 114 g . We describe our methods of design and fabrication and the mechanism of vibration, which is realized by controlling inlet pressure and harnessing a mechanofluidic instability. Our design allows for controllable vibrotactile feedback that is comparable in frequency and greater in amplitude relative to state-of-the-art electromechanical actuators while offering the compliance and conformity of fully soft wearable devices.more » « less
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Vibration is ubiquitous as a mode of haptic communication, and is used widely in handheld devices to convey events and notifications. The miniaturization of electromechanical actuators that are used to generate these vibrations has enabled designers to embed such actuators in wearable devices, conveying vibration at the wrist and other locations on the body. However, the rigid housings of these actuators mean that such wearables cannot be fully soft and compliant at the interface with the user. Fluidic textile-based wearables offer an alternative mechanism for haptic feedback in a fabric-like form factor. To our knowledge, fluidically driven vibrotactile feedback has not been demonstrated in a wearable device without the use of valves, which can only enable low-frequency vibration cues and detract from wearability due to their rigid structure. We introduce a soft vibrotactile wearable, made of textile and elastomer, capable of rendering high-frequency vibration. We describe our design and fabrication methods and the mechanism of vibration, which is realized by controlling inlet pressure and harnessing a mechanical hysteresis. We demonstrate that the frequency and amplitude of vibration produced by our device can be varied based on changes in the input pressure, with 0.3 to 1.4 bar producing vibrations that range between 160 and 260 Hz at 13 to 38 g, the acceleration due to gravity. Our design allows for controllable vibrotactile feedback that is comparable in frequency and outperforms in amplitude relative to electromechanical actuators, yet has the compliance and conformity of fully soft wearable devices.more » « less
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In 2020, cardiovascular diseases resulted in 25% of unnatural deaths in the United States. Treatment with long-term administration of medication can adversely affect other organs, and surgeries such as coronary artery grafts are risky. Meanwhile, sequential compression therapy (SCT) offers a low-risk alternative, but is currently expensive and unwieldy, and often requires the patient to be immobilized during administration. Here, we present a low-cost wearable device to administer SCT, constructed using a stacked lamination fabrication approach. Expanding on concepts from the field of soft robotics, textile sheets are thermally bonded to form pneumatic actuators, which are controlled by an inconspicuous and tetherless electronic onboard supply of pressurized air. Our open-source, low-profile, and lightweight (140 g) device costs $62, less than one-third the cost the least expensive alternative and one-half the weight of lightest alternative approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), presenting the opportunity to more effectively provide SCT to socioeconomically disadvantaged individuals. Furthermore, our textile-stacking method, inspired by conventional fabrication methods from the apparel industry, along with the lightweight fabrics used, allows the device to be worn more comfortably than other SCT devices. By reducing physical and financial encumbrances, the device presented in this work may better enable patients to treat cardiovascular diseases and aid in recovery from cardiac surgeries.more » « less
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Textiles hold great promise as a soft yet durable material for building comfortable robotic wearables and assistive devices at low cost. Nevertheless, the development of smart wearables composed entirely of textiles has been hindered by the lack of a viable sheet-based logic architecture that can be implemented using conventional fabric materials and textile manufacturing processes. Here, we develop a fully textile platform for embedding pneumatic digital logic in wearable devices. Our logic-enabled textiles support combinational and sequential logic functions, onboard memory storage, user interaction, and direct interfacing with pneumatic actuators. In addition, they are designed to be lightweight, easily integrable into regular clothing, made using scalable fabrication techniques, and durable enough to withstand everyday use. We demonstrate a textile computer capable of input-driven digital logic for controlling untethered wearable robots that assist users with functional limitations. Our logic platform will facilitate the emergence of future wearables powered by embedded fluidic logic that fully leverage the innate advantages of their textile construction.more » « less
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The past decade of soft robotics has delivered impactful and promising contributions to society and has seen exponentially increasing interest from scientists and engineers. This interest has resulted in growth of the number of researchers participating in the field and the quantity of their resulting contributions, stressing the community's ability to comprehend and build upon the literature. In this work, a data‐driven review is presented that addresses the recent surge of research by providing a quantitative snapshot of the field. Relevant data are catalogued with three levels of analysis. First, publication‐level analysis explores high‐level trends in the field and bibliometric relationships across the more detailed analyses. Second, device‐level analysis examines the tethering of robots and the incorporation of component types (actuators, sensors, controllers, power sources) into each robot. Finally, component‐level analysis investigates the compliances, material compositions, and “function media” (energetic methods by which components operate) of each soft robotic component in the analyzed literature. The reported data indicate a significant reliance on elastomeric materials, electrical and fluidic media, and physical tethering; meanwhile, controllers and power sources remain underdeveloped relative to actuators and sensors. These gaps in the surveyed literature are elaborated upon, and promising future directions for the field of soft robotics are identified.