NASA, GM Jointly Developing Robotic Gloves For Human Use - aftermarketNews

NASA, GM Jointly Developing Robotic Gloves For Human Use

When engineers, researchers and scientists from GM and NASA began collaborating on the Robonaut 2 (R2) project in 2007, one of the design requirements was for the robot to operate tools designed for humans, alongside astronauts in outer space and factory workers on Earth.

HOUSTON — NASA and General Motors (GM) are jointly developing a robotic glove designed to improve work processes for astronauts and autoworkers, while potentially reducing the risk of repetitive stress injuries.
 
The Human Grasp Assist device, known internally in both organizations as the K-glove or Robo-Glove, resulted from NASA and GM’s Robonaut 2 (R2) project, which launched the first humanoid robot into space in 2011. R2 is a permanent resident of the International Space Station.
 
When engineers, researchers and scientists from GM and NASA began collaborating on R2 in 2007, one of the design requirements was for the robot to operate tools designed for humans, alongside astronauts in outer space and factory workers on Earth. The team achieved an unprecedented level of hand dexterity on R2 by using leading-edge sensors, actuators and tendons comparable to the nerves, muscles and tendons in a human hand.

Research shows that continuously gripping a tool can cause fatigue in hand muscles within a few minutes, but initial testing of the Robo-Glove indicates the wearer can hold a grip longer and more comfortably, the two organizations report.
 
For example, an astronaut working in a pressurized suit outside the space station or an assembly operator in a factory might need to use 15 to 20 pounds of force to hold a tool during an operation but with the robotic glove they might need to apply only 5 to 10 pounds of force.
 
"The prototype glove offers my spacesuit team a promising opportunity to explore new ideas and challenges our traditional thinking of what extravehicular activity hand dexterity could be," said Trish Petete, division chief, Crew and Thermal Systems Division, NASA’s Johnson Space Center.
 
And there are promising applications on the ground, as well, according to GM.
 
"When fully developed, the Robo-Glove has the potential to reduce the amount of force that an autoworker would need to exert when operating a tool for an extended time or with repetitive motions," said Dana Komin, GM’s manufacturing engineering director, Global Automation Strategy and Execution. "In so doing, it is expected to reduce the risk of repetitive stress injury."
 
Inspired by the finger actuation system of R2, actuators are embedded into the upper portion of the glove to provide grasping support to human fingers. The pressure sensors, similar to the sensors that give R2 its sense of touch, are incorporated into the fingertips of the glove to detect when the user is grasping a tool. When the user grasps the tool, the synthetic tendons automatically retract, pulling the fingers into a gripping position and holding them there until the sensor is released.
 
NASA and GM have submitted 46 patent applications for R2, including 21 for R2’s hand and four for the Robo-Glove alone.
 
The first prototype of the glove was completed in March 2011 with a second generation arriving three months later. The fabric for the glove was produced by Oceaneering Space Systems, the same company that provided R2’s "skin."
 
The current prototypes weigh about 2 pounds and include the control electronics, actuators and a small display for programming and diagnostics. An off-the-shelf lithium-ion power-tool battery with a belt-clip is used to power the system. A third-generation prototype that will use repackaged components to reduce the size and weight of the system is nearing completion.
 
To learn more about Robonaut 2, click here.
http://www.nasa.gov/robonaut
 
 

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