Effects of the Artificial Skin Thickness on the Subsurface Pressure Profiles of Flat, Curved, and Braille Surfaces
John-John Cabibihan, Sushil Chauhan, Shruthi Suresh

TL;DR
This study uses finite element modeling and experimental validation to analyze how artificial skin thickness affects subsurface pressure profiles on various surface geometries, impacting tactile sensing in robotics and prosthetics.
Contribution
It introduces a combined simulation and experimental approach to understand how skin thickness influences pressure transmission for different surface types.
Findings
Skin thickness affects peak pressure and pressure distribution shape.
Thin skins (1-3 mm) can discriminate surface types; thicker skins (5 mm) cannot.
Finite element model accurately predicts pressure profiles validated by experimental data.
Abstract
The primary interface of contact between a robotic or prosthetic hand and the external world is through the artificial skin. To make sense of that contact, tactile sensors are needed. These sensors are normally embedded in soft, synthetic materials for protecting the subsurface sensor from damage or for better hand-to-object contact. It is important to understand how the mechanical signals transmit from the artificial skin to the embedded tactile sensors. In this paper, we made use of a finite element model of an artificial fingertip with viscoelastic and hyperelastic behaviors to investigate the subsurface pressure profiles when flat, curved, and Braille surfaces were indented on the surface of the model. Furthermore, we investigated the effects of 1, 3 and 5 mm thickness of the skin on the subsurface pressure profiles. The simulation results were experimentally validated using a 25.4…
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