Modular Self-Lock Origami: design, modeling, and simulation to improve the performance of a rotational joint
Samira Zare, Alex Spaeth, Sandya Suresh, and Mircea, Teodorescu

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Self-Lock Origami, a novel modular rigid origami joint that enhances rotational motion in origami robots by balancing angular amplification and mechanical advantage, demonstrated through multiple manipulator designs.
Contribution
The paper presents the design, analysis, and simulation of the Self-Lock Origami, a flat-foldable yet non-degenerate rotational joint for improved origami robotic applications.
Findings
Self-Lock Origami eliminates degeneracy in flat-foldable joints.
The joint offers a trade-off between angular multiplier and mechanical advantage.
Three manipulator prototypes demonstrate the joint's versatility.
Abstract
Origami structures have been widely explored in robotics due to their many potential advantages. Origami robots can be very compact, as well as cheap and efficient to produce. In particular, they can be constructed in a flat format using modern manufacturing techniques. Rotational motion is essential for robotics, and a variety of origami rotational joints have been proposed in the literature. However, few of these are even approximately flat-foldable. One potential enabler of flat origami rotational joints is the inclusion of lightweight pneumatic pouches which actuate the origami's folds; however, pouch actuators only enable a relatively small amount of rotational displacement. The previously proposed Four-Vertex Origami is a flat-foldable structure which provides an angular multiplier for a pouch actuator, but suffers from a degenerate state. This paper presents a novel rigid…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Materials and Mechanics · Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials · Soft Robotics and Applications
