Awasthi, Chaitanya2024-01-052024-01-052023-08https://hdl.handle.net/11299/259626University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2023. Major: Electrical Engineering. Advisors: Timothy Kowalewski, Andrew Lamperski. 1 computer file (PDF); xi, 146 pages.The compliant nature of soft robotic actuators allows them to maneuver and interact with the environment in ways which are more adaptable and inherently safer compared to the traditional rigid body robots. However, this compliance makes it difficult to control their deformation as these actuators can potentially have infinite degrees of freedom. Controlling the deformation of a soft robotic actuator has potential applications in fields requiring precise control over the shape of the robot. Areas such as medical robotics can use the shape control of soft robots to gently treat aneurysms in humans or deliver medicines within the body, among other applications. However, given a known external loading, it is usually not possible to deform a soft robot into an arbitrary shape if it is fabricated using only a single material. Even if the robot is fabricated using multiple materials, there is a lack of "voxel-level" material tuning to allow for the generation of a soft robot that can take an arbitrary shape. A major contribution of this dissertation is the proposal of a new physics-based method for the computational design of soft hyperelastic robotic actuators to address this problem. The method takes as input an undeformed robot shape, a specified external load, and a user desired final shape. It then solves an inverse problem in design using nonlinear optimization subject to physics constraints. The nonlinear program is solved using a gradient-based interior-point method. Analytical gradients are computed for efficiency. The method outputs fields of material properties, at the level of individual voxels, which can be used to fabricate a soft robot. A body fabricated to match this material field is expected to deform into a user-desired shape, given the same external loading input. The inverse design method is tested for validity and robustness. The performance of the method is tested on several example cases in silico. Another key contribution of the present work is the development of an adaptive impedance controller that allows for a rigid robot (a single degree of freedom indenter) to safely interact with an unknown soft environment, such as a body tissue. The controller is mathematically proven to be asymptotically stable and the simulation results demonstrate the efficacy of the controller in achieving force tracking without the use of a force sensor. The results show that this force tracking is achieved through the asymptotic convergence of the estimated tissue parameters to the true tissue parameters.enFinite element methodHyperelasticityInverse designNonlinear continuum mechanicsNonlinear optimizationSoft roboticsComputational Multi-material Inverse Design of Soft Robotic Actuators via Nonlinear Functional OptimizationThesis or Dissertation