HomeElectronics NewsSoft robot picks fruit without damage

Soft robot picks fruit without damage

Soft robotic grippers use sensors to check fruit ripeness and harvest fruit without damage, aiming to reduce waste and improve harvesting efficiency.

The soft robot can detect ripeness and gently remove fruit by twisting its stem.
Jennifer Shephard/WVU
The soft robot can detect ripeness and gently remove fruit by twisting its stem.Jennifer Shephard/WVU

Researchers from West Virginia University and Cornell University have developed a soft robotic gripper that can assess fruit ripeness and harvest delicate produce without causing damage, aiming to reduce food waste and improve harvesting efficiency.

The system uses soft silicone and polyurethane fingers embedded with sensors that measure a fruit’s size, shape, color, and firmness. Based on this data, it determines whether the fruit is ready to be picked. In strawberry trials, the gripper removed fruit by twisting the stem instead of cutting it, helping reduce bruising.

It addresses a key agricultural challenge: harvesting soft fruits such as strawberries and raspberries within a short ripeness window while avoiding damage during picking, transport, and storage.

Current harvesting still relies heavily on human labor, which faces issues such as labor shortages, physical strain, and inconsistent judgment of ripeness. Many robotic systems also struggle in open-field conditions, while rigid grippers can damage fragile produce.

To overcome this, the researchers designed a soft robotic system that combines tactile and visual sensing. Stretchable optical fibers inside each finger act as touch and bending sensors, while a small camera and distance sensor in the palm provide additional visual input.

The five-finger gripper can detect shape, stiffness, ripeness, and slippage during handling. It operates in under two seconds, lifts up to one kilogram, and achieved nearly 100% accuracy in shape detection during tests.

The approach may also help in crops where ripeness is not clearly visible, such as avocados, where growers rely on touch rather than appearance.

Inspired by biological systems, the design from WVU’s Robotics Lab resembles both a human hand and a starfish. The soft structure helps it absorb force and handle delicate objects more safely than rigid robotic systems.

Beyond agriculture, the same sensing approach could be used in space exploration, healthcare, food handling, and underwater manipulation. Researchers say combining tactile and curvature sensing could also improve biomedical and rehabilitation devices.

Nidhi Agarwal
Nidhi Agarwal
Nidhi Agarwal is a Senior Technology Journalist at Electronics For You, specialising in embedded systems, development boards, and IoT cloud solutions. With a Master’s degree in Signal Processing, she combines strong technical knowledge with hands-on industry experience to deliver clear, insightful, and application-focused content. Nidhi began her career in engineering roles, working as a Product Engineer at Makerdemy, where she gained practical exposure to IoT systems, development platforms, and real-world implementation challenges. She has also worked as an IoT intern and robotics developer, building a solid foundation in hardware-software integration and emerging technologies. Before transitioning fully into technology journalism, she spent several years in academia as an Assistant Professor and Lecturer, teaching electronics and related subjects. This background reflects in her writing, which is structured, easy to understand, and highly educational for both students and professionals. At Electronics For You, Nidhi covers a wide range of topics including embedded development, cloud-connected devices, and next-generation electronics platforms. Her work focuses on simplifying complex technologies while maintaining technical accuracy, helping engineers, developers, and learners stay updated in a rapidly evolving ecosystem.

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