By browsing this website, you acknowledge the use of a simple identification cookie. It is not used for anything other than keeping track of your session from page to page. OK
1

From knitting technology to robotics: untethered thermally actuated textile exoskeleton for dexterity applications

Bookmarks
Article

Ahmed, Ibrahim Adel Khamis ; Cetin, Munire Sibel ; Ozlem, Kadir ; Atalay, Asli Tuncay ; Ince, Gökhan ; Atalay, Ozgur

Advanced Science

2025

Early view

10 p.

exoskeletons ; robots ; ergonomics ; rehabilitation

Technology

https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202509870

English

Bibliogr.;Charts

"Soft wearable robotic devices offer significant potential for human mobility assistance and rehabilitation; however, existing solutions are often hindered by bulkiness, limited scalability, and restricted portability. This study introduces a textile-based exoskeleton glove equipped with thermally driven actuators, achieving dexterous motion in under 12 s using only 10.8 W of power while maintaining a low operating temperature of 48 °C. This performance surpasses the fastest previously reported system in terms of power input and operating temperature, which achieved actuation in 10 s but required 15 W and operated at 100 °C. In comparison, recent studies report response times of 120 s, with 14 W consumption and temperatures near 95 °C. The actuators utilize low-boiling-point liquids that undergo phase transitions upon heating, enabling fast, untethered actuation without external systems. The seamless knitted structure integrates sensing and actuation functionalities, including self-return to initial position capability. This is achieved through digital machine knitting of specific patterns using functional yarns. The actuators demonstrate 270° bending, generating 2 N gripping force while maintaining energy consumption efficiency. The glove is mountable on an industrial robotic arm, demonstrating its ability to grasp and relocate objects. This study presents a quick-response, scalable, energy-efficient solution for wearable robotics."

This work is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Digital



Bookmarks