| Literature DB >> 30598854 |
Toby Elery1, Siavash Rezazadeh1, Christopher Nesler1, Jack Doan1, Hanqi Zhu1, Robert D Gregg1.
Abstract
This paper describes the design of a powered knee- and-ankle transfemoral prosthetic leg, which implements high torque density actuators with low-reduction transmissions. The low reduction of the transmission coupled with a high-torque and low-speed motor creates an actuator with low mechanical impedance and high backdrivability. This style of actuation presents several possible benefits over modern actuation styles implemented in emerging robotic prosthetic legs. Such benefits include free-swinging knee motion, compliance with the ground, negligible unmodeled actuator dynamics, and greater potential for power regeneration. Benchtop validation experiments were conducted to verify some of these benefits. Backdrive and free-swinging knee tests confirm that both joints can be backdriven by small torques (~3 Nm). Bandwidth tests reveal that the actuator is capable of achieving frequencies required for walking and running. Lastly, open-loop impedance control tests prove that the intrinsic impedance and unmodeled dynamics of the actuator are sufficiently small to control joint impedance without torque feedback.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30598854 PMCID: PMC6309177 DOI: 10.1109/ICRA.2018.8461259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE Int Conf Robot Autom ISSN: 2154-8080