Tunable dry adhesion has a range of applications, including transfer printing, climbing robots, and gripping in automated manufacturing processes. Here, a novel concept to achieve dynamically tunable dry adhesion via modulation of the stiffness of subsurface mechanical elements is introduced and demonstrated. A composite post structure, consisting of an elastomer shell and a core with a stiffness that can be tuned via application of electrical voltage, is fabricated. In the nonactivated state, the core is stiff and the effective adhesion strength between the composite post and contact surface is high. Activation of the core via application of electrical voltage reduces the stiffness of the core, resulting in a change in the stress distribution and driving force for delamination at the interface and, thus a reduction in the effective adhesion strength. The adhesion of composite posts with a range of dimensions is characterized and activation of the core is shown to reduce the adhesion by as much as a factor of 6. The experimentally observed reduction in adhesion is primarily due to the change in stiffness of the core. However, the activation of the core also results in heating of the interface and this plays a secondary role in the adhesion change.
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Abstract -
Robust Three‐Component Elastomer–Particle–Fiber Composites with Tunable Properties for Soft Robotics
Materials with tunable properties, especially dynamically tunable stiffness, have been of great interest for the field of soft robotics. Herein, a novel design concept of robust three‐component elastomer–particle–fiber composite system with tunable mechanical stiffness and electrical conductivity is introduced. These smart materials are capable of changing their mechanical stiffness rapidly and reversibly when powered with electrical current. One implementation of the composite system demonstrated here is composed of a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) matrix, Field's metal (FM) particles, and nickel‐coated carbon fibers (NCCF). It is demonstrated that the mechanical stiffness and the electrical conductivity of the composite are highly tunable and dependent on the volume fraction of the three components and the temperature, and can be reasonably estimated using effective medium theory. Due to its superior electrical conductivity, Joule heating can be used as the activation mechanism to realize ≈20× mechanical stiffness changes in seconds. The performance of the composites is thermally and mechanically robust. The shape memory effect of these composites is also demonstrated. The combination of tunable mechanical and electrical properties makes these composites promising candidates for sensing and actuation applications for soft robotics.
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null (Ed.)Fibrillar adhesives composed of fibers with non-circular cross-sections and contacts, including squares and rectangles, offer advantages that include a larger real contact area when arranged in arrays and simplicity in fabrication. However, they typically have a lower adhesion strength compared to circular pillars due to a stress concentration at the corner of the non-circular contact. We investigate the adhesion of composite pillars with circular, square and rectangular cross-sections each consisting of a stiff pillar terminated by a thin compliant layer at the tip. Finite element mechanics modeling is used to assess differences in the stress distribution at the interface for the different geometries and the adhesion strength of different shape pillars is measured in experiments. The composite fibrillar structure results in a favorable stress distribution on the adhered interface that shifts the crack initiation site away from the edge for all of the cross-sectional contact shapes studied. The highest adhesion strength achieved among the square and rectangular composite pillars with various tip layer thicknesses is approximately 65 kPa. This is comparable to the highest strength measured for circular composite pillars and is about 6.5× higher than the adhesion strength of a homogenous square or rectangular pillar. The results suggest that a composite fibrillar adhesive structure with a local stress concentration at a corner can achieve comparable adhesion strength to a fibrillar structure without such local stress concentrations if the magnitude of the corner stress concentrations are sufficiently small such that failure does not initiate near the corners, and the magnitude of the peak interface stress away from the edge and the tip layer thickness are comparable.more » « less