Soft robotics is a field that explores robots built from flexible, compliant materials that can bend, stretch, and adapt to their surroundings. Unlike traditional rigid robots, soft robots can move safely around people, handle delicate objects, and navigate tight or cluttered spaces. This makes them particularly exciting for a range of applications: robot assistants in industrial and home environments, inspection and maintenance of hard-to-reach or fragile areas such as the interior of machines and infrastructure, and minimally invasive medical procedures.
Soft robotics is one of the most interdisciplinary areas, drawing together mechanics, materials science, electronics, sensing, control theory, and machine learning. The core challenge, and the reason the field is so compelling from a research perspective, is that soft robots are far harder to model and control than their rigid counterparts. Therefore, c Current research in the field spans modeling, sensing, actuation, control, learning, and experimental validation, with a strong focus on making these systems more predictable, controllable, and deployable in real-world applications.
At ETF Robotics, our work in soft robotics connects theory, algorithms, and hardware. We study both soft-bodied continuum robots and articulated soft robots with variable stiffness, with the goal of making them more precise, reliable, and intelligent. A central research direction is the development of control and learning methods that can cope with the uncertainty, nonlinearity, and high dimensionality of soft robotic systems, while still providing guarantees on stability and precision. This work is supported by an open-source soft robotics platform that we have developed to enable extensive experimentation possibilities.
