Soft robotics represents a rapidly advancing and significant subfield within modern robotics. However, existing soft actuators often face challenges including unwanted deformation modes, limited functional diversity, and a lack of versatility. This paper presents a four-chamber multimodal soft actuator with a centrally symmetric layout and independent pneumatic control. While building on existing multi-chamber concepts, the design incorporates a cruciform constraint layer and inter-chamber gaps to improve directional bending and reduce passive chamber deformation. An empirical model based on the vector superposition of single- and dual-chamber inflations is developed to describe the bending behavior. Experimental results show that the actuator can achieve omnidirectional bending with errors below 5% compared to model predictions. To demonstrate versatility, the actuator is implemented in two distinct applications: a three-finger soft gripper that can grasp objects of various shapes and perform in-hand twisting maneuvers, and a steerable crawling robot that mimics inchworm locomotion. These results highlight the actuator’s potential as a reusable and adaptable driving unit for diverse soft robotic tasks.
Yang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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