Abstract

Manual lifting tasks involve repetitive raising, holding and stacking movements with heavy objects. These arm movements are notable risk factors for muscle pain, fatigue, and musculoskeletal disorders in workers. An upper-limb wearable robot, as a 6-DOF dual-arm exoskeleton, which was designed to augment workers’ strength and minimize muscular activation in the arm during repetitive lifting tasks. To adjust the robot joint trajectory, the user needs to apply an interactive torque to operate the robot during lifting tasks when a standard virtual mechanical impedance control structure is used. To reduce overshooting of the interactive torque on the user’s joint, a three-tier hierarchical control structure was developed for the robot in this study. At the highest level, a human arm movement detection module is used to detect the user’s arm motion according to the surface electromyography signals. Then, a Hammerstein adaptive virtual mechanical impedance controller is used at the middle level to reduce overshooting and yield an acceptable value of torque for the user’s elbow joint in actual lifting tasks. At the lowest level, the actuator controller on each joint of the robot controls the robot to complete lifting tasks. Several experiments were conducted, and the results showed that the interactive torque on the user’s elbow was limited and the muscular activations of erector spinae and biceps brachii muscles were effectively decreased. The proposed scheme prevents potential harm to the user due to excessive interactive torque on the human elbow joint, such as related muscle fatigue and joint injuries.

Highlights

  • For repetitive movements in high-frequency operations, the manual lifting of objects consumes a large amount of body energy and has low efficiency.[1]

  • The standard virtual mechanical impedance control is a classic control method that is used in upper-limb wearable robots that are used by humans to complete robotassisted lifting tasks

  • These results indicate that the EMG signal from the biceps muscle followed the movement of the elbow joint angle and that our model has the ability to detect arm movements ed 1⁄4 qC À qM

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Summary

Introduction

For repetitive movements in high-frequency operations, the manual lifting of objects consumes a large amount of body energy and has low efficiency.[1]. The standard virtual mechanical impedance control is a classic control method that is used in upper-limb wearable robots that are used by humans to complete robotassisted lifting tasks As it is a linear model, the parameters of the standard virtual mechanical impedance model are set to match the actual interactive torque in the physical human–robot interaction environment. The standard virtual mechanical impedance model was used to build a linear relationship between the actual human–robot interactive torque and the robot joint position for control.

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