Literature DB >> 34114610

Mechanical Efficiency Investigation of an Ankle-Assisted Robot for Human Walking With a Backpack-Load.

Longhan Xie1, Zhihou Wang1, Guowei Huang1, Biao Liu1, Zikang Zhou1.   

Abstract

The purpose of this work is to investigate the efficiency of wearable assistive devices under different load-carriage walking. We designed an experimental platform with a lightweight ankle-assisted robot. Eight subjects were tested in three experimental conditions: free walk with load (FWL), power-off with load (POFL), and power-on with load for different levels of force at a walking speed of 3.6 km/h. We recorded the metabolic expenditure and kinematics of the subjects under three levels of load-carried (10%, 20%, and 30% of body mass). We define the critical force, where at a certain load, the robot inputs a certain force to the human body, and with the assistance of this force, the positive effect of the robot on the human body exactly compensates for the negative effect. The critical forces from the fit of the assistive force and metabolic cost curves were 130 N, 160 N, and 215 N at three different load levels. The intrinsic weight of our device increases mechanical work at the ankle as the load weight rises with 2.08 J, 2.43 J, and 2.73 J for one leg during a gait cycle. With weight bearing increasing, the ratio of the mechanical work input by the robot to the mechanical work output by the weight of the device decreases (from 0.904 to 0.717 and 0.513), verifying that the walking assistance efficiency of such devices decreases as the weight rises.
Copyright © 2021 by ASME.

Entities:  

Keywords:  efficiency; loaded walking; mechanical work; metabolic cost; robot

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34114610      PMCID: PMC8299804          DOI: 10.1115/1.4051434

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomech Eng        ISSN: 0148-0731            Impact factor:   2.097


  26 in total

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