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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Design of a lightweight, tethered, torque-controlled knee exoskeleton

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TLDR
A tethered knee exoskeleton with a strong lightweight frame and comfortable, four-point contact with the leg is designed and built to investigate robotic assistance strategies to improve gait rehabilitation and enhance human athletic ability.
Abstract
Lower-limb exoskeletons show promise for improving gait rehabilitation for those with chronic gait abnormalities due to injury, stroke or other illness. We designed and built a tethered knee exoskeleton with a strong lightweight frame and comfortable, four-point contact with the leg. The device is structurally compliant in select directions, instrumented to measure joint angle and applied torque, and is lightweight (0.76 kg). The exoskeleton is actuated by two off-board motors. Closed loop torque control is achieved using classical proportional feedback control with damping injection in conjunction with iterative learning. We tested torque measurement accuracy and found root mean squared (RMS) error of 0.8 Nm with a max load of 62.2 Nm. Bandwidth was measured to be phase limited at 45 Hz when tested on a rigid test stand and 23 Hz when tested on a person's leg. During bandwidth tests peak extension torques were measured up to 50 Nm. Torque tracking was tested during walking on a treadmill at 1.25 m/s with peak flexion torques of 30 Nm. RMS torque tracking error averaged over a hundred steps was 0.91 Nm. We intend to use this knee exoskeleton to investigate robotic assistance strategies to improve gait rehabilitation and enhance human athletic ability.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Performance Evaluation of Lower Limb Exoskeletons: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: It is found that, in general, the evaluation of lower limb exoskeletons is still largely focused on straight walking, with poor coverage of most of the basic motor skills that make up the activities of daily life, in spite of the metrics of human-robot interaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comfort-Centered Design of a Lightweight and Backdrivable Knee Exoskeleton

TL;DR: Kinematic simulations demonstrate that misalignment between the robot joint and knee joint can be reduced by 74% at maximum knee flexion and a low impedance mechanical transmission reduces the reflected inertia and damping of the actuator to human, thus the exoskeleton is highlybackdrivable.
Journal ArticleDOI

A hip–knee–ankle exoskeleton emulator for studying gait assistance:

TL;DR: A hip–knee–ankle exoskeleton emulator that can apply high torques and powers that match or exceed those observed in uphill running and when paired with human-in-the-loop optimization is expected to identify new assistance strategies to improve human mobility.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Hinge-Free, Non-Restrictive, Lightweight Tethered Exosuit for Knee Extension Assistance During Walking

TL;DR: A lightweight, hinge-free wearable robot combining soft textile exosuit components with integrated rigid components, which assists knee extension when needed but is otherwise highly transparent to the wearer, shows promise for the assistive capability of the device and its potential to improve the quality of gait and increase mobility in clinical populations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

Biomechanical Energy Harvesting: Generating Electricity During Walking with Minimal User Effort

TL;DR: A biomechanical energy harvester that generates electricity during human walking with little extra effort that is well-suited for charging powered prosthetic limbs and other portable medical devices.
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