Researchers 3D Print a Multi-Directional Pressure Sensor for Future Robotics, Tactile Projects

Designed for printing on commercial 3D printers, these carbon nanotube-powered pressure sensors should be cheap and easy to make.

A team of researchers from the Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology (DGIST) and Gachon University has designed a low-cost multi-directional pressure sensor that, they say, could find use in future robotic grippers and other tactile sensor systems.

Building on earlier work, which produced 3D-printed pressure sensors capable of working in only a single direction, the team was able to build a version which can work in multiple directions — and which is suitable for printing on an off-the-shelf 3D printer.

The trick: A new printable conductive polymer, based on polylactic acid (PLA) treated with multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs). Based on a bumper structure, the sensor — which also employs a commercial elastomer — uses three pressure-sensing elements to detect pressure in multiple directions at once. An added temperature sensor allows for calibration of the measured electrical resistance, which varies with temperature.

Researchers say their novel pressure sensor can be printed on standard 3D printers, like this one. (📷: Ultimaker)

"Our multi-axis pressure sensor successfully captures the readings even when tilted forces are applied," says Hoe Joon Kim, assistant professor of robotics at DGIST, of the work. "Moreover, the temperature-sensing component can calibrate the resistance shift with temperature changes. In addition, the scalable and low-cost fabrication process is fully compatible with commercial 3D printers."

"The proposed 3D printing technology has a wide range of applications in energy, biomedicine, and manufacturing. With the incorporation of the proposed sensing elements in robotic grippers and tactile sensors, the detection of multi-directional forces along with temperature could be achieved, heralding the onset of a new age in robotics."

The team's work has been published under closed-access terms in the journal Composites Part B: Engineering.

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