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Octopus-inspired robotic gripper handles delicate produce

A new robotic gripper technology being trialed at produce packer Taylor Farms gently picks and packs produce items of varying size, shape, and weight without changeover.

The soft polymer gripper is patterned so that when air fills the channels inside, the fingers wrap around and grip objects.
The soft polymer gripper is patterned so that when air fills the channels inside, the fingers wrap around and grip objects.

A new robotic end effector inspired by the movement and flexibility of octopus tentacles is being tested for full-scale implementation at salad and produce packager Taylor Farms Pacific in Tracy, CA. Comprising soft robotic “fingers,” the new gripper tool is the first to be able to handle items as delicate as a cherry tomato and then immediately pick up an item of a different size, shape, and weight, without tool changeover or reprogramming.

“This is the most exciting project I’ve worked on in my career,” says Alan Applonie, President of Taylor Farms Pacific. “What’s different about soft robotics is the actual fingers, the grippers, that go on the end of the arm, that are now able to handle and manage strawberries and other delicate fruits and vegetables without damage. It actually looks like you detached an arm off a robot and put octopus fingers on the end of it.”

Taylor Farms first saw the technology, from Soft Robotics Inc., in June 2015 at the United Fresh Convention. So impressed was the produce packager with the concept and its potential for the $27 billion fresh-cut fruit and vegetable market that in December 2015, it invested $1 million in Soft Robotics. Currently, Taylor Farms’ Tracy plant is integrating two robots on one of its production lines, which it anticipates will be operational by year-end 2016.

Among the advantages of Soft Robotics’ grippers for produce: They are washdown-capable, enhance food safety and sanitation, significantly reduce labor, and offer extreme flexibility for product handling. The endgame for Taylor Farms is the use of the technology across all 14 of its U.S. facilities—a four- to five-year endeavor, says Applonie.

Automation becomes an option

Taylor Farms is a family-owned business with 12 operating companies throughout North America that serves customers in the foodservice, retail produce, and retail deli segments of the fresh business. Its products include bulk value-added produce, retail bagged salads and vegetables, and ready-to-eat meals and snacks, among others.

“Taylor Farms is a leader in innovation,” says Applonie. “Dedicated to being North America’s favorite maker of salad and healthy fresh foods, we focus on innovation by consistently developing new products and improving production methods. Taylor Farms is grounded in a commitment to quality with products harvested, packaged, and shipped at the peak of freshness.”

At its 231,000-sq-ft Tracy processing facility, Taylor Farms operates 30 production lines dedicated to fruits, vegetables, and prepared foods. The challenges faced by Taylor Farms in its packaging operations have included sanitation and labor requirements.

Says Director of Business Development for Soft Robotics Dan Harburg, “Taylor Farms employs something like 15,000 people across their plants in the U.S. Labor is becoming a really big challenge for them. They are having a harder and harder time finding people to work in the plants. When you have a situation where your labor force has to be highly trained to maintain sanitary standards, but you’ve got new people coming in every day and hundreds of people in your plants, it becomes really difficult to maintain sanitation and ensure that people aren’t damaging product.”

Applonie explains that automation had never been a viable option for Taylor Farms’ packaging lines because of the turnover in its product offerings. “It has been difficult to utilize automation with our deli and prepared food offerings because of the complexity and frequent changes of product sets,” he says. “Product lines can change anywhere from two to three times a year with our deli customers. They’re constantly looking for the latest on-trend offerings, especially in line with the seasonal changes.”

Seeing Soft Robotics demonstrating the picking and packing of seven different types of fruits and vegetables interchangeably at its booth at the United Fresh Convention, Taylor Farms immediately grasped the implications of the technology for its own packaging lines. Says Applonie, “My mind has kind of exploded with the possibilities of where it could be used in our plant.”

Octopus-like fingers employ pneumatics

The technology behind soft robotics originated with a Harvard chemist, George Whitesides, who was researching robotic designs based on the way octopi look and how they interact with the world—“for example, a robot that could squeeze its way underneath a gap in a door and then get up and keep walking,” explains Harburg.

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