Flexible thin-film Electro-Adhesive Devices (EADs) represent a promising technology with great potential for gripper applications. Generally, the gripping action of an EAD is due to the electrostatic force induced by an electric field produced by applying a voltage across a couple of electrodes that are embedded between dielectric substrates. This paper presents a novel manufacturing process and the experimental characterization of a multilayer electro-adhesive gripper. The proposed device employs highly elastic silicone (PDMS) thin-film as the grasping layer, i.e., the dielectric layer that comes in contact with the grasped object, a carbon-black mixture in a silicone compound for the electrodes, and a rigid polyimide thin-film as the backing layer, i.e., the dielectric layer on the backside of the EAD. A fabrication methodology is illustrated, which starts from a casting of thin conductive electrodes on a polyimide film, followed by a laser-cutting operation to shape the electrodes and a blade casting process to encapsulate the overall system in a PDMS compound. Different prototypes obtained through this manufacturing procedure have been experimentally evaluated through a testing campaign conducted on three groups of specimens, each composed of five identical samples, with a different electrode thickness per group. Samples are tested for electrostatic shear stress and electrical breakdown during the grasping of paper substrates, identifying the best performing EAD group.
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