Electric grippers or servo grippers are most of the time used as synonymous. Are they really the same thing? An electric gripper simply means that the power provided to its actuator is electricity. Electric is used to differentiate it from pneumatic, which is still the most widely used in the vast majority of industrial applications to power robotic grippers.
The Robotiq Adaptive Gripper (here shown on a Universal Robot) is
one example of a servo gripper with mechanically intelligent fingers.
Some electric grippers mimic the simple open-close behaviour of pneumatic grippers. Their actuators are usually on-off devices such as solenoids. Is an electric robot gripper always a servo gripper? In fact, servo grippers are a subcategory of electric grippers. A servo gripper, just like a servo motor, can be closed-loop controlled to achieve more evolved behaviours than simply opening and closing. A servo gripper can be seen as a servo motor driving a gripping mechanism.
If your goal is simply to get rid of air, using an electric gripper with an open-close feature might do the work. If you need more precise control on position, speed, or force and have a wider stroke range to cover, a servo-gripper is really what you need. We've previously discussed the advantages of servo grippers over pneumatic grippers. Let's say you've decided to use an electric gripper, you'll obviously have to define all the usual gripper requirements.
On top of that, you'll want to compare the different features that come specifically from the electrical actuation.
So pneumatic or electric? The challenge of the use you require will usually dictate which type of gripper you will need, but often electric grippers can preform more functions and are therefore useful in applications requiring more flexibility.