Abstract
A human stomach is an organ in the digestive system that breaks down foods by physiological digestion, including mechanical and chemical functions. The mechanical function is controlled by peristaltic waves generated over the stomach body, known as antral contraction waves (ACW). The stomach's physiological digestion is essential to sustain nutrition and health in humans. Replicating the digestion process in a robot provides a test environment as an alternative solution to in vivo testing, which is difficult in practice. Stomach robots made of rigid rods and metal cylinders are unrealistic replicas to contract and expand like biological examples. With soft robotics technology, it is possible to translate biological behavior into an engineering context. Soft robotics introduce potential methods to replicate peristaltic waves and achieve a soft-bodied stomach simulator. This work presents a soft robotic stomach simulator's (SoRSS) concept, design, and experimental validation. A pneumatic bellows actuation for linear elongation and a ring of bellows actuation for circular contraction are proposed first. Multi-ring actuators are then arranged to form an SoRSS that generates ACW and antral contracting pressure (ACP). The SoRSS satisfies the specification of human stomach anatomy and motility and finally undergoes experimental validation using videofluoroscopy with the outcomes presenting the ACW, ACP, and the digestion phases during the actuation process. Those are compared with other medical studies to validate SoRSS functionality.
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