An artificial skin from conductive rubber

  • Sabrina Affortunati (Speaker)

Activity: Talk or presentationContributed talkscience-to-science

Description

Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is a non-invasive technique that allows the detection and localization of impedance changes. By applying impedance tomography to a non-conducting rubber-base material filled with various densities of well-conducting carbon nanotubes, an artificial skin for robots can be envisioned, allowing to mimic in some sense the pressure dependent mechanoreceptors like Meissner’s or Pacinian corpuscles. The ultimate aim of this work is to provide a basic mechanoreceptor for small to medium forces of pressures that also allows to some extend the spatial mapping based on solving an inverse problem in impedance tomography. For this purpose a carbon nanotube filled synthetic rubber was used whose local resistivity is modulated via a locally applied force. The percolation theory provides the theoretical background of the functional dependency of resistivity vs. local pressure. The necessary electronics for the excitation of the electrodes and for the measurement was developed and the evaluation of the inverse reconstruction problem was implemented on a computer.
Period24 Feb 2022
Event title18th International Conference on Computer Aided Systems Theory - EUROCAST 2022
Event typeConference
LocationSpainShow on map

Fields of science

  • 202027 Mechatronics
  • 202037 Signal processing
  • 202036 Sensor systems
  • 202 Electrical Engineering, Electronics, Information Engineering
  • 202012 Electrical measurement technology

JKU Focus areas

  • Digital Transformation