Robotics Engineering PhD Speaking & Writing Qualifiers - Wenpeng Wang

Tuesday, May 27, 2025
10:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m.
Location
Floor/Room #
405 and Virtual

Fabrication and Characterization of Additively Manufactured Stretchable Strain Sensors Towards the Shape Sensing of Continuum Robots

Preview

Wenpeng Wang

This talk describes the manufacturing and experimental characterization of novel stretchable strain sensors for continuum robots. The overarching goal of this research is to provide a new solution for the shape sensing of these devices. The sensors are fabricated via direct ink writing, an extrusion-based additive manufacturing technique. Electrically conductive material (i.e., the ink) is printed into traces whose electrical resistance varies in response to mechanical
deformation. The principle of operation of stretchable strain sensors is analogous to that of conventional strain gauges, but with a significantly larger operational window thanks to their ability to withstand larger strain. Among the different conductive materials considered for this study, we opted to fabricate the sensors with a high-viscosity eutectic Gallium-Indium ink, which in initial testing exhibited high linearity (R2 ≈ 0.99), gauge factor ≈ 1, and negligible drift. Benefits of the proposed sensors include (i) ease of fabrication, as they can be conveniently printed in a matter of minutes; (ii) ease of installation, as they can simply be glued to the outside body of a robot; and (iii) ease of miniaturization, which enables integration into millimeter-sized continuum robots.

Advisor:  Professor Loris Fichera (WPI)

Committee:  Professor Berk Calli (WPI) and Professor Cagdas Onal(WPI)

Zoom:  https://wpi.zoom.us/j/93439010207

Audience(s)

Department(s):

Robotics Engineering