Abstract
To perform essential daily activities the movement of shoulder, elbow, and wrist play a vital role and therefore proper functioning of upper-limb is very much essential. We therefore have been developing an exoskeleton robot (ExoRob) to rehabilitate and to ease upper limb motion. Toward to make a complete (i.e., 7DOF) upper-arm motion assisted robotic exoskeleton this paper focused on the development of a 2DOF exoskeleton robot to rehabilitate the elbow and forearm movements. The proposed 2DOF ExoRob is supposed to be worn on the lateral side of forearm and provide naturalistic range movements of elbow (flexion/extension) and forearm (pronation/supination) motions. This paper also focuses on the modeling and control of the proposed ExoRob. A kinematic model of the ExoRob has been developed based on modified Denavit-Hartenberg notations. Nonlinear sliding mode control technique is employed in dynamic simulation of the proposed ExoRob, where trajectory tracking that corresponds to typical rehab (passive) exercises has been carried out to evaluate the effectiveness of the developed model and controller. Simulated results show that the controller is able to maneuver the ExoRob efficiently to track the desired trajectories, which in this case consisted in passive arm movements. These movements are widely used in rehab therapy and could be performed efficiently with the developed ExoRob and the controller.
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