Getting to grips with the FinGripper
Bionic FinGripper sorts bulbs and chocolate eggs
Learning from nature – built for nature:
with the FinGripper from Festo fruit, bulbs or pressure-sensitive food can be handled quickly and reliably. This is thanks to the so-called “Fin Ray effect” which is based on the design of the tail fins of fish.
If tulip bulbs and soft chocolate eggs are gripped with conventional metal grippers or vacuum functions, the result is a high level of loss and damage. This goes against the grain of the two central objectives of automation technology: speed and quality.
Just like the human hand
The bionic FinGripper, on the other hand, is light, flexible and adaptive. It consists of a pneumatic actuator in the form of a bellows and three gripper fingers arranged in the Fin Ray pattern of the tail fin of a fish. The basic structure is made up of two flexible bands which meet at one end to form a triangle. Intermediate stays are connected to the bands at regular intervals by articulated joints. This flexible design enables the gripper fingers to adapt to the shape of a workpiece when pressure is applied laterally – just like a human hand, but much faster.
Sorting chocolate eggs
This bionic gripper operates on the same principle in a sorting station for chocolate eggs. The gripper fingers fully enclose the chocolate eggs without crushing them or damaging the aluminium wrapping. “The flexible design of the FinGripper even allows the chocolate eggs to be gripped if they are leaning to one side or are incorrectly positioned,” explains engineer Federico Nardone of the Italian system integrator FluidoDinamica.
The proportional pneumatic valve VPPM ensures that the pressure is correct; this allows individual acceleration and pressure ramps to be applied. The variable flow rates provided by these proportional valves allow the cylinder pressures to be adapted to a given production or sorting process. Everything is connected to the robotic controller CMXR which controls the Tripod robotic handling unit. The Tripod moves the FinGripper quickly towards the chocolate eggs. “This type of robot is ideal for handling light loads at high speeds,” adds Nardone.
90 % lighter
FinGripper is manufactured using selective laser sintering. In this process, successive layers of polyamide powder of a thickness of just 0.1 mm are applied and allowed to harden to form a solid component. This reduces the weight acting on the tool carrier by no less than 90 % compared with a conventional metal gripper. This means that the Festo FinGripper is able to grip and transport workpieces in a very energy-efficient way.
Gripping bulbs
The advantages of these lightweight and adaptive bionic grippers are also exploited by Total Systems, a Dutch company producing machines and systems for handling flowers and bulbs.
The FinGripper became available at just the right time as the company was developing a new machine for sorting bulbs and uses the gripper to sort the bulbs according to size and quality. FinGripper now carries out the work which was previously done laboriously and less efficiently by human hands.
Contact us at Electroquip to discuss your handling requirents using Festo products in more detail