| Literature DB >> 34208947 |
Lingxing Chen1,2,3,4, Chunjie Chen1,3,4,5, Zhuo Wang1,3,4, Xin Ye1,3,4, Yida Liu1,3,4, Xinyu Wu1,3,4,5.
Abstract
Wearable robotic devices have been proved to considerably reduce the energy expenditure of human walking. It is not only suitable for healthy people, but also for some patients who require rehabilitation exercises. However, in many cases, the weight of soft exosuits are relatively large, which makes it difficult for the assistant effect of the system to offset the metabolic consumption caused by the extra weight, and the heavy weight will make people uncomfortable. Therefore, reducing the weight of the whole system as much as possible and keeping the soft exosuit output power unchanged, may improve the comfort of users and further reduce the metabolic consumption. In this paper, we show that a novel lightweight soft exosuit which is currently the lightest among all known powered exoskeletons, which assists hip flexion. Indicated from the result of experiment, the novel lightweight soft exosuit reduces the metabolic consumption rate of wearers when walking on the treadmill at 5 km per hour by 11.52% compared with locomotion without the exosuit. Additionally, it can reduce more metabolic consumption than the hip extension assisted (HEA) and hip flexion assisted (HFA) soft exosuit which our team designed previously, which has a large weight. The muscle fatigue experiments show that using the lightweight soft exosuit can also reduce muscle fatigue by about 10.7%, 40.5% and 5.9% for rectus femoris, vastus lateralis and gastrocnemius respectively compared with locomotion without the exosuit. It is demonstrated that decreasing the weight of soft exosuit while maintaining the output almost unchanged can further reduce metabolic consumption and muscle fatigue, and appropriately improve the users' comfort.Entities:
Keywords: comfort; lightweight; metabolic rate; muscle fatigue; wearable soft exosuit
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34208947 PMCID: PMC8301778 DOI: 10.3390/bios11070215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1The lower limb lightweight soft exosuit. The whole system is worn on the waist and thighs of humans. The F represents the direction of assistance force.
The mass distribution of the lightweight soft exosuit.
| Part | Mass(kg) | Location |
|---|---|---|
| Waist belt | 0.29 | Waist |
| Actuator | 0.214 | Waist |
| Batteries | 0.53 | Waist |
| MCU | 0.08 | Waist |
| IMUs | 0.024 | Thigh |
| Wraps | 0.22 | Thigh |
| Load cells | 0.05 | Thigh |
| Other component | 0.392 | Waist |
Figure 2The stiffness model of the soft exosuit. The stiffness model represents the relationship between the angle of hip joint and the length of Bowden cable. The angle of 0 is the angle of hip joint when standing. The positive and negative angles represent the hip flexion and hip extension respectively. The is the coefficient of determination.
Figure 3Human Gait Cycle Analysis.
Figure 4Human hip joint biological torque curve when walking on the ground.
Figure 5The desired force of the lightweight soft exosuit.
Figure 6The lightweight soft exosuit control system. : desired force, : measured force, : force error, : target position of the motor, : measured position, : position error, : measured angle.
The physical conditions of subjects.
| Subjects | Gender | Height (cm) | Weight (kg) | Age (Years Old) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | Male | 182 | 75 | 25 |
| B | Male | 165 | 61 | 21 |
| C | Female | 160 | 45 | 25 |
| D | Male | 176 | 68 | 24 |
| E | Male | 165 | 58 | 24 |
| F | Male | 185 | 102 | 21 |
Figure 7Evaluation experiment of lightweight soft exosuit with MasterScreen PFT System. Subjects wear the lightweight soft exosuit and measure metabolic consumption.
Figure 8Metabolic consumption which uses MasterScreen PFT System to obtain. (a) Using the lightweight soft exosuit to do metabolic consumption experiments through wearing the exosuit without power, without using the exosuit and wearing the exosuit with power respectively. (b) Similar to (a), using the HFA soft exosuit to do metabolic consumption experiments. (c) Similar to (a), using the HEA soft exosuit to do metabolic consumption experiments.
Figure 9Evaluation experiment of the lightweight soft exosuit with sEMG device. Subjects wear the lightweight soft exosuit and measure muscle fatigue degree.
Figure 10Muscle fatigue degree which uses sEMG to obtain. Muscle A, B and C represent the rectus femoris, vastus lateralis and gastrocnemius, respectively. Exo Assist and Without Exo represent using the lightweight soft exosuit to do muscle fatigue degree experiments through wearing the exosuit with power and without using the exosuit respectively. Initial State represents the initial muscle fatigue degree before testing.
Comparison of famous soft exoskeletons.
| Research | Assistance Mode | Weight (kg) | Power | Net Metabolic Cost (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kim et al. [ | Hip extension | 5.004 | Powerd | 9.3 |
| Jim et al. [ | Hip flexion | ∖ | Powerd | 5.9 |
| Sangjun et al. [ | Hip extension and flexion | 5.1 | Powerd | 16.93 |
| Ding et al. [ | Hip extension and flexion | ∖ | Physiological | 14.6 |
| Collins et al. [ | Ankle plantar flexion | 0.816–1.006 | Unpowered | 7.2 ± 2.6 |
| This work | Hip extension | 1.8 | Powered | 14.06 |