Abstract

In this work we present a lower limb haptic exoskeleton suitable for patient rehabilitation, specifically in the presence of illness on postural equilibrium. Exoskeletons have been mostly conceived to increase strength, while in this work patient compliance with postural equilibrium enhancement is embedded. This is achieved with two hierarchical feedback loops. The internal one, closing the loop on the joint space of the exoskeleton offers compliance to the patient in the neighborhood of a reference posture. It exploits mechanical admittance control in a position loop, measuring the patient’s Electro Miographical (EMG) signals. The problem is solved using multi variable robust control theory with a two degrees of freedom setting. A second control loop is superimposed on the first one, operating on the Cartesian space so as to guarantee postural equilibrium. It controls the patient’s Center of Gravity (COG) and Zero Moment Point (ZMP) by moving the internal loop reference. Special attention has been devoted to the mechanical multi-chain model of the exoskeleton which exploits Kane’s method using the Autolev symbolic computational environment. The aspects covered are: the switching system between single and double stance, the system’s non-holonomic nature, dependent and independent joint angles, redundancy in the torque controls and balancing weight in double stance. Physical experiments to validate the compliance method based on admittance control have been performed on an elbow joint at first. Then, to further validate the haptic interaction with the patient in a realistic situation, experiments have been conducted on a first exoskeleton prototype, while the overall system has been simulated in a realistic case study.

Highlights

  • Research in biped robotics started in the late 1960s

  • A huge part of the research has been devoted to exoskeletons [1], haptic mechanical anthropomorphic devices worn by an operator and working in concert with his movements

  • When a complete lower limb exoskeleton was not yet available, in order to validate the effectiveness of using Electro Miographical (EMG) signals for admittance control, experiments on the forearm of an operator have been performed

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Summary

Introduction

A huge part of the research has been devoted to exoskeletons [1], haptic mechanical anthropomorphic devices worn by an operator and working in concert with his movements. Complete exoskeletons have been proposed as a promising solution for assisting patients during rehabilitation [2,3]. Even in patients who have lost the ability to autonomously perform certain movements, carrying out assisted exercises of the limbs to be rehabilitated enables the patient initially to regain neural control, and subsequenlty muscular control on that limb. Physiologists call this phenomenon neural plasticity [4]. Rehabilitation generally requires the patient to carry out a number

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