Robotic Gripper Employs Efficiencies of Tactical Technology Over Other Methods

March 28, 2019
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The new Gecko Gripper, an end-of-arm robotic gripper from OnRobot, employs NASA-created technology to replace vacuum products for adhering to surfaces. The technology, initially based on the gripping capability of gecko lizards (hence the product name) was developed through Stanford and NASA research, followed by multiple industrial collaborations.

It employs millions of micro-scaled fibrillar stalks that adhere to a surface using van der Waals forces, enabling robots to pick up flat, smooth objects at significant energy savings, according to company officials, over existing products such as vacuum grippers, which require compressed air. The gripper interfaces with any robot and reportedly offers rapid ROI based solely on the electricity required to compress air.

The grippers affix to a range of surfaces, including those that vacuum grippers can’t handle, claim OnRobot officials, who state that the grippers also offer competitive advantages over electrostatic grippers, which are weaker and require high-voltage systems to operate.

Industry-Related Terms: Compress, Grippers, Surface
View Glossary of Metalforming Terms

 

See also: OnRobot US, Inc.

Technologies: Pressroom Automation

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