English

Stretchable Arduinos embedded in soft robots

Robotics 2024-09-17 v1

Abstract

To achieve real-world functionality, robots must have the ability to carry out decision-making computations. However, soft robots stretch and therefore need a solution other than rigid computers. Examples of embedding computing capacity into soft robots currently include appending rigid printed circuit boards (PCBs) to the robot, integrating soft logic gates, and exploiting material responses for material-embedded computation. Although promising, these approaches introduce limitations such as rigidity, tethers, or low logic gate density. The field of stretchable electronics has sought to solve these challenges, but a complete pipeline for direct integration of single-board computers, microcontrollers, and other complex circuitry into soft robots has remained elusive. We present a generalized method to translate any complex two-layer circuit into a soft, stretchable form. This enabled the creation of stretchable single-board microcontrollers (including Arduinos) and other commercial circuits (including Sparkfun circuits), without design simplifications. As demonstrations of the method's utility, we embed highly stretchable (>300% strain) Arduino Pro Minis into the bodies of multiple soft robots. This makes use of otherwise inert structural material, fulfilling the promise of the stretchable electronics field to integrate state-of-the-art computational power into robust, stretchable systems during active use.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2409.10333,
  title  = {Stretchable Arduinos embedded in soft robots},
  author = {Stephanie J. Woodman and Dylan S. Shah and Melanie Landesberg and Anjali Agrawala and Rebecca Kramer-Bottiglio},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2409.10333},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

45 pages, 19 figures total. Main text is 28 pages with 6 figures. The rest is supplementary

R2 v1 2026-06-28T18:46:12.862Z