Abstract

An exoskeleton robot helps the wearer with mechanical forces by identifying the wearer’s intentions and requires high energy efficiency, sufficient load capacity, and a comfortable fit. However, since it is difficult to implement complex anatomical movements of the human body, most exoskeleton robots are designed simply, unlike the anatomy of real humans. This forces the wearer to accept the robot’s stiffness entirely, and to use energy inefficiently from the power source. In this paper, a simple 1 degree of freedom (DoF) structure, which was mainly used in the knees of exoskeleton robots, was designed with a polycentric (multi-axial) structure to minimize the misalignment between wearer and robot, so that torque transfer could be carried out efficiently. In addition, the overall robot system was constructed by using an electro-hydraulic actuator (EHA) to solve the problems of the energy inefficiency of conventional hydraulic actuators and the low load capacity of conventional electric actuators. After the configuration of the hardware system, the sliding mode controller was designed to address the EHA nonlinear models and the uncertainty of the plant design. This was configured as Simulink for the first verification, and the experiment was conducted by applying it to the actual model to demonstrate the performance of the sliding mode control. In this process, an optical rotary encoder was used as the main feedback sensor of the controller. The proposed polycentric knee exoskeleton robot system using the EHA was able to reach the desired target value well despite the presence of many model uncertainties.

Highlights

  • An exoskeleton system is a kind of wearable robot that analyzes the wearer’s intentions and assists the wearer with mechanical forces

  • The electro-hydraulic actuator (EHA) system consisted of a hydraulic cylinder with a maximum permissible pressure of 3.5 MPa, a TFH-080-U-SV (Takako, Seika, Japan) hydraulic pump, and a 200 W Maxon (Maxon motor ag, Sachseln, Switzerland) motor with a gear ratio of 6:1

  • The AMT203-V rotary encoder (CUI Devices, Tualatin, OR, USA), which was used as a feedback sensor, transmitted data to the microcontroller unit (MCU) via serial peripheral interface (SPI) communication

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Summary

Introduction

An exoskeleton system is a kind of wearable robot that analyzes the wearer’s intentions and assists the wearer with mechanical forces. The exoskeleton robot is currently being used in various fields, including industrial, military, medical, and rehabilitation [1,2], and related research is actively being carried out to suit the purpose of each field. Robots that directly helped people, such as for human power augmentation, were mainly developed in industrial and military fields. In modern times robots are being developed in a form used to closely assist people in their daily lives or to help them with rehabilitation training. These changes are strongly related to the aging of society [3].

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