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Silicone Ethernet (SEth): a Nervous System for Robotic Touch

Mengyao Liu, Dag Malstaf, Jonathan Oostvogels, Sam Michiels, Alexander Badri-Spröwitz, Danny Hughes

TL;DR

The proposed Silicone Ethernet (SEth), a wireless solution for touch sensing, communication and power transfer within a conductive silicone substrate, provides prioritized traffic arbitration similar to that found in wired control networks such as CAN.

Abstract

Fine-grained robotic touch sensing is essential for tasks such as robot-human interaction and the handling of hazardous materials. Yet, the sense of touch of robots is limited by the cost and complexity of routing cables to embedded sensors. This paper tackles this problem by contributing Silicone Ethernet (SEth), a wireless solution for touch sensing, communication and power transfer within a conductive silicone substrate. SEth~\emph{neurons} require no battery and deliver computation, communication, sensing and energy harvesting within a compact package. These neurons are placed into an undifferentiated conductive silicone substrate which may form the entire body of a soft robot, or an outer `skin' for hard robots. Our evaluation shows that SEth achieves data rates of 100\,kbps with sub-$μ$W receive and mW-scale transmit power. Exploiting the unique properties of the conductive silicone substrate, SEth provides prioritized traffic arbitration similar to that found in wired control networks such as CAN. The SEth network inherently supports capacitive touch and presence sensing and neurons can harvest sufficient energy to transmit 10s of messages per second at a range of 1\,m. Considered in sum, these features open new degrees of freedom in touch sensing for soft robots.

Silicone Ethernet (SEth): a Nervous System for Robotic Touch

TL;DR

The proposed Silicone Ethernet (SEth), a wireless solution for touch sensing, communication and power transfer within a conductive silicone substrate, provides prioritized traffic arbitration similar to that found in wired control networks such as CAN.

Abstract

Fine-grained robotic touch sensing is essential for tasks such as robot-human interaction and the handling of hazardous materials. Yet, the sense of touch of robots is limited by the cost and complexity of routing cables to embedded sensors. This paper tackles this problem by contributing Silicone Ethernet (SEth), a wireless solution for touch sensing, communication and power transfer within a conductive silicone substrate. SEth~\emph{neurons} require no battery and deliver computation, communication, sensing and energy harvesting within a compact package. These neurons are placed into an undifferentiated conductive silicone substrate which may form the entire body of a soft robot, or an outer `skin' for hard robots. Our evaluation shows that SEth achieves data rates of 100\,kbps with sub-W receive and mW-scale transmit power. Exploiting the unique properties of the conductive silicone substrate, SEth provides prioritized traffic arbitration similar to that found in wired control networks such as CAN. The SEth network inherently supports capacitive touch and presence sensing and neurons can harvest sufficient energy to transmit 10s of messages per second at a range of 1\,m. Considered in sum, these features open new degrees of freedom in touch sensing for soft robots.
Paper Structure (28 sections, 13 figures, 3 tables)

This paper contains 28 sections, 13 figures, 3 tables.

Figures (13)

  • Figure 1: Hardware Block Diagram of the SEth Neuron
  • Figure 2: The SEth neuron prototype, showing the key components on the 25 mm $\times$ 20 mm PCB. A 2 € coin is included for scale.
  • Figure 3: Power profile for RX front-end.
  • Figure 4: Power profile for TX front-end.
  • Figure 5: Power profile for MCU during RX.
  • ...and 8 more figures