Combining and Decoupling Rigid and Soft Grippers to Enhance Robotic Manipulation
Maya Keely, Yeunhee Kim, Shaunak A. Mehta, Joshua Hoegerman, Robert, Ramirez Sanchez, Emily Paul, Camryn Mills, Dylan P. Losey, Michael D., Bartlett

TL;DR
This paper introduces RISOs, a hybrid robotic gripper combining rigid and soft mechanisms with switchable adhesives, significantly expanding object manipulation capabilities across a wide weight spectrum and improving versatility over traditional grippers.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel RISO approach that unifies rigid and soft grippers using switchable adhesives, enabling real-time manipulation of diverse objects with enhanced capacity and user preference.
Findings
RISO grippers can handle objects from 2 mg to 2 kg.
RISO outperforms existing grippers in object diversity and capacity.
Participants preferred using RISO in user studies.
Abstract
For robot arms to perform everyday tasks in unstructured environments, these robots must be able to manipulate a diverse range of objects. Today's robots often grasp objects with either soft grippers or rigid end-effectors. However, purely rigid or purely soft grippers have fundamental limitations: soft grippers struggle with irregular, heavy objects, while rigid grippers often cannot grasp small, numerous items. In this paper we therefore introduce RISOs, a mechanics and controls approach for unifying traditional RIgid end-effectors with a novel class of SOft adhesives. When grasping an object, RISOs can use either the rigid end-effector (pinching the item between non-deformable fingers) and/or the soft materials (attaching and releasing items with switchable adhesives). This enhances manipulation capabilities by combining and decoupling rigid and soft mechanisms. With RISOs robots can…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Materials and Mechanics · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence · Soft Robotics and Applications
