DocumentCode
716327
Title
An ankle-foot prosthesis emulator with control of plantarflexion and inversion-eversion torque
Author
Collins, Steven H. ; Myunghee Kim ; Tianjian Chen ; Tianyao Chen
Author_Institution
Dept. Mech. Eng., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
fYear
2015
fDate
26-30 May 2015
Firstpage
1210
Lastpage
1216
Abstract
Ankle inversion-eversion compliance is an important feature of conventional prosthetic feet, and control of inversion, or roll, in robotic prostheses could improve balance for people with amputation. We designed a tethered ankle-foot prosthesis with two independently-actuated toes that are coordinated to provide plantarflexion and inversion-eversion torques. This configuration allows a simple lightweight structure with a total mass of 0.72 kg. Strain gages on the toes measure torque with less than 2.7% RMS error, while compliance in the Bowden cable tether provides series elasticity. Benchtop tests demonstrated a 90% rise time of less than 33 ms and peak torques of 180 N·m in plantarflexion and ±30 N·m in inversion-eversion. The phase-limited closedloop torque bandwidth is 20 Hz with a 90 N·m amplitude chirp in plantarflexion, and 24 Hz with a 20 N·m amplitude chirp in inversion-eversion. The system has low sensitivity to toe position disturbances at frequencies of up to 18 Hz. Walking trials with five values of constant inversion-eversion torque demonstrated RMS torque tracking errors of less than 3.7% in plantarflexion and less than 5.9% in inversion-eversion. These properties make the platform suitable for haptic rendering of virtual devices in experiments with humans, which may reveal strategies for improving balance or allow controlled comparisons of conventional prosthesis features. A similar morphology may be effective for autonomous devices.
Keywords
medical robotics; prosthetics; Bowden cable tether; ankle-foot prosthesis emulator; autonomous devices; bandwidth 20 Hz; constant inversion-eversion torque; haptic rendering; morphology; plantarflexion; prosthetic feet; robotic prostheses; virtual devices; Bandwidth; Joints; Legged locomotion; Prosthetics; Springs; Torque; Torque measurement;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Seattle, WA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICRA.2015.7139345
Filename
7139345
Link To Document