IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics | 2019

Admittance Shaping-Based Assistive Control of SEA-Driven Robotic Hip Exoskeleton

 
 
 

Abstract


This paper presents an admittance shaping-based assistive control for a series elastic actuator (SEA) driven robotic hip exoskeleton that can assist individuals with hip muscle weakness to restore normative mobility. The motivation for this paper is to develop a unified controller framework for designing an SEA-driven hip exoskeleton to assist walking and enhance gait stability. The controller design aims to modify the dynamic response of a coupled human-exoskeleton system, i.e., the relationship between the net muscle torque exerted by the human and the resulting angular motion, to ensure strong human-exoskeleton synergy to provide the effective assistance. This controller was preliminarily evaluated on a healthy subject walking on a treadmill at a speed of 1.0 m/s. Results showed that the exoskeleton can effectively provide walking assistance to the human by reducing electromyography (EMG) activation and increasing agility during locomotion. Specifically, EMG was reduced 3.3%–38% when walking with the hip exoskeleton when compared to walking without wearing the hip exoskeleton. In addition, timing of the maximum hip flexion angle increased by 10% (moved from 42% to 32% of gait cycle) when the controller had an inertia compensation of 60%. The faster onset of the maximum flexion angle will allow the wearer to more quickly generate reactive steps when trying to avoid a fall. Future work will aim to apply the hip exoskeleton to persons having hip muscle weakness or other musculoskeletal impairment, to restore hip movement and enough hip force to walk normally.

Volume 24
Pages 1508-1519
DOI 10.1109/TMECH.2019.2916546
Language English
Journal IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics

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