Nastic movements in plants that occur in response to environmental
stimuli have inspired many man-made shape-morphing systems. Tendril is an
exemplification serving as a parasitic grasping component for the climbing plants by
transforming from a straight shape into a coiled configuration via the asymmetric
contraction of internal stratiform plant tissues. Inspired by tendrils, this study using a
three-dimensional (3D) printing approach developed a class of soft grippers with
preprogrammed deformations being capable of imitating the general motions of plant
tendrils, including bending, spiral, and helical distortions for grasping. These grippers
initially in flat configurations were tailored from a polymer?paper bilayer composite
sheet fabricated via 3D printing a polymer on the paper substrate with different
patterns. The rough and porous paper surface provides a printed polymer that is well-adhered to the paper substrate which in
turn serves as a passive strain-limiting layer. During printing, the melted polymer filament is stretched, enabling the internal strain
to be stored in the printed polymer as memory, and then it can be thermally released, which will be concurrently resisted by the
paper layer, resulting in various transformations based on the different printed geometries. These obtained transformations were
then used for designing grippers to grasp objects with corresponding motions. Furthermore, a fully equipped robotic tendril with
three segments was reproduced, where one segment was used for grasping the object and the other two segments were used for
forming a tendril-like twistless spring-like structure. This study further helps in the development of soft robots using active
polymer materials for engineered systems.