Literature DB >> 29758963

Force control of wire driving lower limb rehabilitation robot.

Yupeng Zou1, Huizi Ma2, Zhiyuan Han1, Yang Song1, Kai Liu1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To solve the technical problems associated with the research on lower limb rehabilitation robot in terms of configuration design, human-machine compatibility, lightweight, and multimodel rehabilitation.
OBJECTIVE: This study introduced a parallel wire driving lower limb rehabilitation robot. The robot featured modular design, reconfiguration, multimodel, and good human-machine compatibility.
METHODS: The dynamics model of the wire driving module (WDM) was built based on which a multiple feedback loop controller (including a forward controller and a surplus force compensator) was designed.
RESULTS: The experimental results showed that the WDM could load force accurately and reliably during the loading procedure.
CONCLUSIONS: The machinery and control system of the WDM met the design request.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Parallel wire driving robot; dynamics modeling; force control; lower limb rehabilitation

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29758963      PMCID: PMC6004983          DOI: 10.3233/THC-174714

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Technol Health Care        ISSN: 0928-7329            Impact factor:   1.285


Introduction

In terms of the configuration of the robot, the lower limb rehabilitation robots can be divided into the exoskeleton-type and the footpad-type rehabilitation robots [1]. The exoskeleton-type rehabilitation robot drives the coordinated swinging of the legs of the patients, thereby assisting the patients to complete the rehabilitation exercise using the exoskeleton. Different gait training patterns can be realized by changing the movement patterns or the control strategies of the exoskeleton. The most typical exoskeleton-type product is Lokomat [2]. When patients can do some moderate active exercises, the exoskeleton becomes an assistance system, such as the Hybrid Assistive Limb of Tsukuba University and the ReWalk of Argo Medical Technologies [3, 4]. The footpad-type rehabilitation robot, using pedals to drive the patient’s feet, can simulate the natural walking motion of the feet. These kinds of robots can achieve different forms of gait training through controlling the pedals’ attitude and motion. Stefan Hesse, who has been working on the footpad-type rehabilitation robot, has developed the production prototype G-EO System after the prototypes Gait Trainer and Haptic Walker [5]. Through optimization and improving the ordinary elliptical trainer, the research groups from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Madonna Rehabilitation Hospital developed an Intelligently Controlled Assistive Rehabilitation Elliptical trainer [6]. Presently, the research on the lower limb rehabilitation robots is associated with the following problems: (1) The existing exoskeleton-type rehabilitation robots have some disadvantages such as low stiffness, low precision, large inertia, and poor real-time capability. (2) It is difficult to implement single-joint training by using the footpad-type rehabilitation robot. (3) The DOF of the existing lower limb rehabilitation robot is limited, leading to movement deviation between the human body and the robot. The design of the robot needs to address problems pertaining to human-machine compatibility. (4) The drive system of the robot is required to work against the gravity of the mechanical body and the patient, resulting in high energy consumption and complex structure. It is necessary to carry out the lightweight design to improve the working efficiency. (5) The lower limbs are required to perform complex force/pose training in different rehabilitation phases. Most of the existing robots can realize pose control, but few robots can realize the complex force control. In the wire driving mechanism, the wire replaces the rigid element as the transmission component. The wire driving mechanism has high load/weight ratio, high velocity/accuracy ratio, large working space, and adjustable stiffness. The wire driving robot has unique comprehensive advantages compared with traditional serial robots and parallel robots [7]. The application of wire driving mechanism in rehabilitation represents bright prospects because of the good flexibility. Some typical robots are available, such as MariBot, CAREX, C-ALEX, ROPES, PACER, and String Man [8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15]. In this study, a parallel wire driving robot (PWDR) was used to realize the rehabilitation of lower limbs, featuring modular design, reconfiguration, multimodel, and good human-machine compatibility. Figure 1 illustrates the structural scheme of the wire driving lower limb rehabilitation robot. The whole rehabilitation system was built on a treadmill. Four wire driving module (WDM) made up a planar PWDR. The robot could realize comprehensive rehabilitations, including passive rehabilitation, assistive rehabilitation, and initiative rehabilitation, by controlling the pose and force of the shank. The body-weight support unit was used to control the force that is applied on the lower limbs. The buffer springs were adopted to limit the motion of the pelvis of the subject. The pelvis of the subject could move freely within limits.
Figure 1.

Structural scheme of the wire driving lower limb rehabilitation robot.

Structural scheme of the wire driving lower limb rehabilitation robot. In the passive training process, the WDM took the initiative to drive the shank in accordance with the natural motion. The WDM was a position servo system. The gravity of the lower limb and the joint resistances were the external disturbances that had some effect on the position servo system. The WDM could achieve high position accuracy easily. In the active training process, the WDMs passively followed the active movement of lower limbs and exerted a desired resultant force on the shank. For each WDM, it was a force servo system, or rather a typical passive force servo system [16]. The motion of the lower limbs had great influence on the control accuracy of the passive force servo system. The major problem in researching the passive loading system lay in designing the forward force controller and the surplus force compensator.

Mechanical construction and dynamics modeling

Mechanical construction of the WDM

Figure 2 illustrates the composition of the WDM. The WDM consisted of a torque motor that drove a traction pulley directly. An increment encoder was located on the motor, and the encoder’s readings were used to determine the wire elongation. The pose state and localization of the lower limbs could be further determined. A pinch roller, fixed on the side frame, served to confine the wire to the traction pulley groove. A tension sensor was fixed on the other side of the frame, and a guide wheel was located on the opposite part of the tension sensor. After passing through the guide wheel, the wire’s motion direction changed by 180. The tension of the sensor was twice as much as the wire. Finally, the wire connected to the target after passing through a fixed guide wheel and a rotating guide wheel.
Figure 2.

Composition of the WDM.

Composition of the WDM.

Wire driving dynamics model

On the basis of the mechanical construction, the mechanism model of the WDM is shown in Fig. 3. The WDM loaded the tension on the lower limbs through the wire. The wire was simplified into a mass-spring-damping model for its low vibration frequency in the training process to clarify the effect of the wire more clearly.
Figure 3.

Mechanism model of the WDM.

Mechanism model of the WDM. The block diagram of the WDM is shown in Fig. 4. The output was affected the motor armature voltage and the disturbance caused by movements of the lower limbs.
Figure 4.

Block diagram of the WDM.

Block diagram of the WDM. Based on Fig. 4, the wire driving dynamics model of the WDM was as follows: where is the velocity of the traction point, . (s) is the transfer function from the motor armature voltage to the tension . It is the transfer function of the forward channel. is the transfer function from the input velocity disturbance to the output surplus force . It is the transfer function of the disturbance channel. In Eqs (2) and (3), is the equivalent moment of inertia, and is the equivalent viscous friction coefficient. The nominal value of each parameter in the WDM dynamics model is shown in Table 1.
Table 1

Parameters of the wire driving dynamics model

ParameterValueParameterValue
R/Ω 5Jm/(kgm2)0.027
L/H0.008r/m0.060
Ce/[V(rad/s)-1]3.82M/kg0.036
Cm/(NmA-1)3.15K/(Nm)-11 × 105
Bm/(Nmsrad-1)0.0106B/(Nsm-1)30
Parameters of the wire driving dynamics model

Characteristic analysis

The frequency characteristic of is described in Fig. 5. In the working frequency (within 100 rad/s), the amplitude curve of was approximately 20 dB; the phase curve was approximately a linear slant line. These characteristics provided some conveniences in the correction of the forward channel. In the low-frequency band, the amplitude curve of did not need to be corrected. However, the phase response of presented an overall phase lagging characteristic (approximately 1) and a phase lag of 35 at 62.8 rad/s.
Figure 5.

Bode diagram of M(s).

Bode diagram of M(s). was a type 0 system due to the lack of integral element in the denominator. The main control problem for lay in increasing the system type to improve the static precision. However, the phase reserve would decrease and the stability of the system could not be guaranteed for the introduction of an integral element. To guarantee the stability, the open-loop gain needed to be reduced. But the response speed would slow down for the reduction of the open-loop gain. Therefore, the WDM forward controller needed to balance the static precision and response speed simultaneously. Bode diagram of M(s). The Bode diagram of is shown in Fig. 6. The amplitude of the surplus force increased and the phase of the surplus force was slightly prior to the velocity disturbance for the first-order differential element in in the low-frequency band with the increase in the disturbance frequency. When the disturbance frequency was higher than 126 rad/s, the amplitude of the surplus force decreased with the increase in the velocity frequency for the second-order oscillation element in . The phase of the surplus force lagged behind the velocity disturbance ( 90).
Figure 6.

Bode diagram of M(s).

The surplus force could not be completely eliminated due to the following reasons: (1) The surplus force caused by the motion of the lower limb affected the output directly. However, the compensation, generated by the controller, always lagged behind the output. (2) The change in the work environment resulted in the variation in the dynamics model of WDM for the nonlinearity and time variation of the system, which made it difficult to design the surplus force compensator. Multiple feedback loop force control strategy for the wire driving system. It is demanded that the surplus force reduction rate should exceed 90% to ensure the loading precision during the active training process. The experimental results confirmed that the remaining 10% surplus force was imperceptible to the subject. In Eq. (4), is the surplus force before compensation and is the surplus force after compensation. Normally, the motion frequency of the lower limbs would not exceed 3 Hz. This required that the surplus force reduction rate exceeded 90% when the disturbance frequency was within 3 Hz.

Control strategy

The multiple feedback loop force control strategy for the wire driving passive force servo system is shown in Fig. 7.
Figure 7.

Multiple feedback loop force control strategy for the wire driving system.

The control strategy design for the passive force servo system should consider two aspects: (a) A forward controller should be designed based on the forward channel transfer function to improve the response speed and precision of the force control. (b) A surplus force compensator should be designed to minimize the negative impact of the velocity disturbance  [17, 18]. The forward controller consisted of an integral element, a local negative feedback element , and a feed-forward element . The surplus force compensator was designed based on the structure invariance principle. An integral element was adopted as the primary control element for , which improved the system from 0-type to I-type. However, a single integral element would decrease the phase reserve and lower the dynamic quality. In this case, a local negative feedback element (a second-order phase-lead element), composed of a proportional element , a second-order oscillation element, and a second-order differentiation element, could be used to improve the system’s dynamic quality. Under the premise of ensuring stability, the feed-forward element in combination with the local negative feedback element could enhance the response speed of the system. Essentially was a proportional element. When the input changed rapidly, the slow response of the primary controller for the integral element had a significant attenuation influence on input signals. Meanwhile, the input transmitted to the phase-corrected system by dint of . The force servo system worked in an open-loop state approximately, and the response speed of the system could be brought into play adequately. When the force servo system reached a stable state, the impact of the integral element was gradually seen. The steady-state accuracy was improved. With reference to the block diagram of the WDM in Fig. 4 and Eq. (1), the surplus force was generated by the input velocity disturbance . Therefore, it was the most direct and effective method to compensate the surplus by using the traction point velocity. Furthermore, based on the structure invariance principle, the surplus force compensator was Actually, the velocity of the traction point could not be measured precisely. Given that the stiffness of the wire was large enough, the velocity of the traction point and the velocity of the WDM were approximately equal. Moreover, considering the physical realizability, a first-order low-pass filter was introduced into the surplus force compensator. The modified surplus force compensator was Experimental platform of the multiple feedback loop control for passive loading. Surplus force of the wire driving module with different frequency velocity disturbance input.

Experimental evaluation

Passive loading experiment was performed in this section to further confirm the effectiveness of the multiple feedback loop force controller. The experimental platform is shown in Fig. 8. The bearing unit was a position servo system. The loading unit, following the bearing unit passively and exerting a force on the bearing unit, was a force servo system.
Figure 8.

Experimental platform of the multiple feedback loop control for passive loading.

With reference to the multiple feedback loop force control strategy in Fig. 7, the wire tension and the velocity of the bearing unit were used as the feedback signals. The desired force of the passive loading was 150 N. The velocity amplitude of the bearing unit (sine wave) was 0.3 m/s. The results of passive loading when the velocity frequency changed from 1 to 6 Hz are shown in Fig. 9, and the statistical results of the surplus force reduction rate are described in Table 2.
Figure 9.

Surplus force of the wire driving module with different frequency velocity disturbance input.

Table 2

Statistical results of the multiple feedback loop control for passive loading

Velocity frequency, Hz123456
Velocity amplitude, ms-10.3
Surplus force before compensation, N202.14204.24207.54212.64218.58226.01
Surplus force after compensation, N101419232829
Surplus force reduction rate, λ (%)95.0593.1590.8589.1887.1987.17
Statistical results of the multiple feedback loop control for passive loading The theoretical surplus force compensator was simplified based on the dominant pole placement to facilitate implementation of the experiments. The experiments results indicated that the multiple feedback loop force controller could decrease the surplus force efficiently and improve the precision. The designed controller could meet the performance requirements of lower limb rehabilitation.

Conclusions and future work

This study presented the mechanical design of the WDM and experimental evaluation of a wire driving lower limb rehabilitation robot. The dynamics model of the WDM was provided, based on which a forward controller and a surplus force compensator for WDM were designed. The experiments demonstrated that the WDM could load force accurately and reliably during the loading procedure. The machinery and control system of the WDM achieved the design request. Future work will focus on control methodologies for the robot to improve the force control accuracy. Further experimental and clinical studies will be conducted to determine the efficacy and safe applicability of the robot in human subjects.
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