Abstract

With the emerging of wearable robots, the safety and effectiveness of human-robot physical interaction have attracted extensive attention. Recent studies suggest that online measurement of the interaction force between the robot and the human body is essential to the aspects above in wearable exoskeletons. However, a large proportion of existing wearable exoskeletons monitor and sense the delivered force and torque through an indirect-measure method, in which the torque is estimated by the motor current. Direct force/torque measuring through low-cost and compact wearable sensors remains an open problem. This paper presents a compact soft sensor system for wearable gait assistance exoskeletons. The contact force is converted into a voltage signal by measuring the air pressure within a soft pneumatic chamber. The developed soft force sensor system was implemented on a robotic hip exoskeleton, and the real-time interaction force between the human thigh and the exoskeleton was measured through two differential soft chambers. The delivered torque of the hip exoskeleton was calculated based on a characterization model. Experimental results suggested that the sensor system achieved direct force measurement with an error of 10.3 ± 6.58%, and torque monitoring for a hip exoskeleton which provided an understanding for the importance of direct force/torque measurement for assistive performance. Compared with traditional rigid force sensors, the proposed system has several merits, as it is compact, low-cost, and has good adaptability to the human body due to the soft structure.

Highlights

  • The scope of this paper is to develop a soft pneumatic force sensor system, which is mainly used to measure interaction force detection between the exoskeleton and human thigh

  • Since the hip exoskeleton is closely worn on the outside of the human body, the installation position is highly related to the measurement purpose of the wearable sensor

  • The developed soft sensor system is integrated into the hip exoskeleton, and the walking test was carried out on the treadmill

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Summary

Introduction

Many countries are facing an ageing population, and there are lots of recent studies which help the elderly improve their quality of life by developing compact and portable wearable exoskeleton robots [1,3,6]. These so-called partial-assist exoskeletons are expected to be used for rehabilitation and daily gait assistance [2,7,8,9,10]. Several studies suggest encouraging results in reducing walking metabolic costs and improving gait performance [3,11], which has great potential in applications such as health care, rehabilitation, and gait assistance

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