Abstract

Walking without impacts has been considered in dynamics as a motion/force control problem. In order to avoid impacts, an approach for both the specified motion of the biped and its ground reaction forces was presented yielding a combined motion and force control problem. As an application, a walker on a horizontal plane has been considered. In this paper, it is shown how the control of the ground reaction forces and the energy consumption depend on the gradient of a slope. The biped dynamics and the constraints within the biped system and on the ground are discussed. A motion control synthesis is developed using the inverse dynamics principle proven to be most efficient for human walking research, too. The impactless walking with controlled legs is illustrated by a seven-link biped. The “flying” biped has nine degrees of freedom, with six control inputs. During locomotion, the standing leg has three scleronomic constraints, and the trunk has three rheonomic constraints. However, there are three rheonomic constraints for the prescribed leg motion or three scleronomic constraints for reaction forces of the trailing leg, respectively. The nominal control action for impactless walking can be precomputed and stored. The model proposed allows the investigation of several problems: uphill and downhill walking, optimization of step length, stiction of the feet on the slope and many more. All these findings are also of interest in biomechanics.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call