Optimizing electrostatic cleaning for dust removal on gecko-inspired adhesives

被引:18
作者
Alizadehyazdi, Vahid [1 ]
Bonthron, Michael [1 ]
Spenko, Matthew [1 ]
机构
[1] IIT, Mech Mat & Aerosp Engn, Chicago, IL 60616 USA
关键词
Electrostatic cleaning; Particle adhesion; Dust removal; Microstructured adhesives; Gecko; Bio-inspiration; LIQUID;
D O I
10.1016/j.elstat.2020.103499
中图分类号
TM [电工技术]; TN [电子技术、通信技术];
学科分类号
0808 ; 0809 ;
摘要
Gecko-inspired adhesives are one of the most promising forms of controllable adhesives for a wide range of applications, especially robotic gripping, perching, and climbing. One impediment to the technology's success is the negative effect of dust and other contaminants, which can significantly decrease adhesion in real-world environments. Previous work has shown that electrostatic forces were capable of removing adhered dust on the surface of gecko-inspired adhesives and that a two-phase square wave input to the electrostatic element with the lowest possible frequency produced the highest cleaning efficiency. In this work, dust particle size, electrode geometry (electrode width and gap), duty cycle of the exciting wave, peak-peak voltage of the electrodes, and the thickness of dielectric layer (the gecko-inspired microstructures) are evaluated experimentally and in simulation. Moreover, three possible electrostatic particle removal mechanisms were modeled to explain their relative importance: repulsion, sliding, and rolling. Results indicate that the highest cleaning efficiency for all particle sizes occurs with the highest possible peak-peak voltage when the electrode width and gap are 400 mu m and 300 mu m, respectively. The results also show the highest cleaning efficiencies are produced using a duty cycle of 50% on the thinnest samples of the gecko-inspired microstructures, where electrodes are closer to particles. Finally, particle sliding and particle rolling are the dominant factors in electrostatic cleaning of gecko-inspired adhesives, while particle repulsion plays a limited role.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 39 条
[1]   A tunable dielectric to improve electrostatic adhesion in electrostatic/microstructured adhesives [J].
Akherat, S. M. Javid Mahmoudzadeh ;
Karimi, Mohammad Amin ;
Alizadehyazdi, Vahid ;
Asalzadeh, Shokoufeh ;
Spenko, Matthew .
JOURNAL OF ELECTROSTATICS, 2019, 97 :58-70
[2]   An Electrostatic/Gecko-Inspired Adhesives Soft Robotic Gripper [J].
Alizadehyazdi, Vahid ;
Bonthron, Michael ;
Spenko, Matthew .
IEEE ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION LETTERS, 2020, 5 (03) :4679-4686
[3]   A microstructured adhesive gripper with piezoelectric controlled adhesion, cleaning, and sensing [J].
Alizadehyazdi, Vahid ;
Spenko, Matthew .
SMART MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES, 2019, 28 (11)
[4]   Evaluation of Material Properties for Practical Microstructured Adhesives: Low Dust Adhesion and High Shear Strength [J].
Alizadehyazdi, Vahid ;
Simaite, Aiva ;
Spenko, Matthew .
ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES, 2019, 11 (08) :8654-8666
[5]  
Alizadehyazdi V, 2018, IEEE INT C INT ROBOT, P7083, DOI 10.1109/IROS.2018.8594091
[6]   Electrostatic self-cleaning gecko-like adhesives [J].
Alizadehyazdi, Vahid ;
Modabberifar, Mehdi ;
Akherat, S. M. Javid Mahmoudzadeh ;
Spenko, Matthew .
JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE, 2018, 15 (141)
[7]  
[Anonymous], 2010, THESIS
[8]   Controllable dry adhesion based on two-photon polymerization and replication molding for space debris removal [J].
Busche, Jan F. ;
Starke, Gereon ;
Knickmeier, Saskia ;
Dietzel, Andreas .
MICRO AND NANO ENGINEERING, 2020, 7
[9]   Particle removal by electrostatic and dielectrophoretic forces for dust control during lunar exploration missions [J].
Calle, C. I. ;
Buhler, C. R. ;
McFall, J. L. ;
Snyder, S. J. .
JOURNAL OF ELECTROSTATICS, 2009, 67 (2-3) :89-92
[10]  
Carpick RW., 1998, MRS Online Proceedings Library Archive, V539