Paper
20 May 2009 Bio-inspired tactile sensing arrays
Ravinder S. Dahiya, Maurizio Valle, Giorgio Metta, Leandro Lorenzelli
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 7365, Bioengineered and Bioinspired Systems IV; 73650D (2009) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.821696
Event: SPIE Europe Microtechnologies for the New Millennium, 2009, Dresden, Germany
Abstract
This work presents the development of tactile sensing arrays, inspired by cutaneous sensing in humans, for the fingertips of a humanoid robot. The tactile sensing arrays have been developed in two phases. Microelectrode arrays (MEA), having 32 sensing elements - each epoxy adhered with 25μm thick piezoelectric polymer (PVDF-TrFE) film, were fabricated in the first phase. When connected to the gate of FET devices (external to the chip), each element on MEA acts like an extended gate; thereby facilitating modulation of charge in the induced channel by the charge generated in PVDF-TrFE film - as a result of applied force. Thus, each sensing element converts force into voltage. The tactile sensing arrays developed in second phase work on the same principle but are free from any extended gate. These arrays (having 25 sensing elements) use POSFET (Piezoelectric Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistors) touch sensing elements - in which, piezoelectric polymer film is directly spin coated on the gate area of the FET devices. Thus, a POSFET touch sensing element 'senses and partially processes at same site' - as is done by receptors in human skin. The spatial-temporal performance of these chips is similar to that of skin in the human fingertips.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ravinder S. Dahiya, Maurizio Valle, Giorgio Metta, and Leandro Lorenzelli "Bio-inspired tactile sensing arrays", Proc. SPIE 7365, Bioengineered and Bioinspired Systems IV, 73650D (20 May 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.821696
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Cited by 20 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Polymers

Sensors

Field effect transistors

Polymer thin films

Ferroelectric polymers

Spatial resolution

Capacitance

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