| Literature DB >> 35321419 |
Appolinaire C Etoundi1, Alexander Dobner1, Subham Agrawal1, Chathura L Semasinghe1, Ioannis Georgilas2, Aghil Jafari1.
Abstract
Movement within the human body is made possible by joints connecting two or more elements of the musculoskeletal system. Losing one or more of these connections can seriously limit mobility, which in turn can lead to depression and other mental issues. This is particularly pertinent due to a dramatic increase in the number of lower limb amputations resulting from trauma and diseases such as diabetes. The ideal prostheses should re-establish the functions and movement of the missing body part of the patient. As a result, the prosthetic solution has to be tested stringently to ensure effective and reliable usage. This paper elaborates on the development, features, and suitability of a testing rig that can evaluate the performance of prosthetic and robotic joints via cyclic dynamic loading on their complex movements. To establish the rig's validity, the knee joint was chosen as it provides both compound support and movement, making it one of the major joints within the human body, and an excellent subject to ensure the quality of the prosthesis. Within the rig system, a motorised lead-screw simulates the actuation provided by the hamstring-quadricep antagonist muscle pair and the flexion experienced by the joint. Loads and position are monitored by a load cell and proximity sensors respectively, ensuring the dynamics conform with the geometric model and gait analysis. Background: Robotics, Prosthetics, Mechatronics, Assisted Living.Entities:
Keywords: knee joint; prosthesis; prosthetics; robotic device; robotic joint; test rig design; velocity control
Year: 2022 PMID: 35321419 PMCID: PMC8936071 DOI: 10.3389/frobt.2021.613579
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Robot AI ISSN: 2296-9144
FIGURE 1Comparison of knee flexion between a normal and amputee gait (Powers et al., 1998).
FIGURE 2(top) Subject A participating in kinematic study by walking (bottom) Motion capture results showing typical gait (Dobner).
FIGURE 3The flexion angle and associated angular velocities of the human knee joint along with their simplified plots.
FIGURE 4Schematic of the mechanical components (Dobner).
FIGURE 5Diagram of the Cartesian method of the Geometry Model for the Ottobock 3R106 (Dobner).
FIGURE 7Graph of experienced load (blue) and flexion angle (red) at 1.1 V, with an SG filtration of the load function.
FIGURE 8Graph of experienced load (blue) and flexion angle (red) at 6 V, with an SG filtration of the load function.
FIGURE 9Graph of experienced load and angular velocity during a voltage increase from zero to approximately 8 V.