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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Design of an Ankle Exoskeleton Employing Dual Action Plantarflexion Assistance and Gait Progression Detection

Bisquera, Chance Luc 19 January 2022 (has links)
Since the 1960s, research into the medical applications of wearable robots has been fueled by a growing need for assistive technologies that can help individuals impacted by musculoskeletal disorders such as sarcopenia independently manage common activities of daily living while maintaining their natural physical capacities. While contemporary research has demonstrated promising developments, the usefulness of exoskeletons in everyday settings remains limited due to design factors that include the limited practicality of existing battery technologies, the need for actuators exhibiting a high output torque-to-weight ratio, a need for modular designs that are minimally disruptive to wearers, and the need for control systems that can actively work in sync with a user. To explore potential solutions to some of these limiting factors, a novel ankle exoskeleton prototype supporting ankle plantarflexion during gait was developed under a design approach that seeks to optimize actuator performance. The actuation system featured in this prototype consists of a custom dual-action linear actuator that can provide mechanical assistance to both ankles via a single BLDC motor and an underlying Bowden cable system. The metric ball screw and BLDC motor implemented in the linear actuator were selectively chosen to minimize the motor torque and current required to assist wearers impacted by a degree of muscle weakness under an assistance-as-needed design paradigm. The prototype additionally features an array of force sensing resistors for tracking gait progression and exploring potential user-based control strategies for synchronizing the exoskeleton actuator with a wearer's gait. Performance analysis for this prototype was conducted with the goal of quantifying the exoskeleton's force output, actuator settling time, and the control system's ability to track gait and identify key events in the gait cycle. The preliminary findings of this experimental analysis support the viability of the actuator's dual-action concept and gait progression tracking system as a starting ground for future developments that build on a similar design optimization approach. / Master of Science / Healthy aging and good physical health are characterized in part by one's ability to self-manage a core set of daily living tasks, one of the most prominent of which is gait. Relative to existing assistive technologies such as wheelchairs, exoskeletons provide the unique benefit of providing active mechanical support while encouraging users to rely on their natural physical capabilities. While recent technological developments in the field of wearable robots show promise, the viability of exoskeletons in an everyday setting remains constrained in part by three underlying design factors: the limited practicality of existing battery technologies, a need for actuators that can satisfactorily balance a high force output with weight, and a need for control strategies that can properly synchronize wearable robots with users. The ankle exoskeleton prototype introduced in this thesis is a portable, energetically autonomous wearable device that supports ankle plantarflexion during the push-off stages of the gait cycle. The design for this prototype seeks to optimize actuator performance and features a novel dual-action linear actuator that provides walking support to both ankles using a single DC motor. The exoskeleton additionally features an array of contact sensors that track the user's progression throughout the gait cycle and allow for the examination of potential control strategies for synchronizing the actuator with the wearer's gait. Performance analysis conducted for this prototype quantifies the exoskeleton's force output, approximates the actuator's settling time between steps, and assesses the control system's ability to track gait and synchronize with a wearer. The findings from these performance evaluation experiments support the viability of the actuator's dual-action concept and gait progression tracker as a foundation for future developments that build on a similar design optimization approach.
2

Gait Dynamic Stability Analysis with Wearable Assistive Robots

January 2018 (has links)
abstract: Lower-limb wearable assistive robots could alter the users gait kinematics by inputting external power, which can be interpreted as mechanical perturbation to subject normal gait. The change in kinematics may affect the dynamic stability. This work attempts to understand the effects of different physical assistance from these robots on the gait dynamic stability. A knee exoskeleton and ankle assistive device (Robotic Shoe) are developed and used to provide walking assistance. The knee exoskeleton provides personalized knee joint assistive torque during the stance phase. The robotic shoe is a light-weighted mechanism that can store the potential energy at heel strike and release it by using an active locking mechanism at the terminal stance phase to provide push-up ankle torque and assist the toe-off. Lower-limb Kinematic time series data are collected for subjects wearing these devices in the passive and active mode. The changes of kinematics with and without these devices on lower-limb motion are first studied. Orbital stability, as one of the commonly used measure to quantify gait stability through calculating Floquet Multipliers (FM), is employed to asses the effects of these wearable devices on gait stability. It is shown that wearing the passive knee exoskeleton causes less orbitally stable gait for users, while the knee joint active assistance improves the orbital stability compared to passive mode. The robotic shoe only affects the targeted joint (right ankle) kinematics, and wearing the passive mechanism significantly increases the ankle joint FM values, which indicates less walking orbital stability. More analysis is done on a mechanically perturbed walking public data set, to show that orbital stability can quantify the effects of external mechanical perturbation on gait dynamic stability. This method can further be used as a control design tool to ensure gait stability for users of lower-limb assistive devices. / Dissertation/Thesis / Masters Thesis Mechanical Engineering 2018
3

Toward Novel Remote-Center-of-Motion Manipulators and Wearable Hand-Grounded Kinesthetic Haptics for Robot-Assisted Surgery / 外科手術支援のためのロボットマニピュレータとハプティクスに関する研究

Sajid, Nisar 25 March 2019 (has links)
付記する学位プログラム名: デザイン学大学院連携プログラム / 京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(工学) / 甲第21759号 / 工博第4576号 / 新制||工||1713(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院工学研究科機械理工学専攻 / (主査)教授 松野 文俊, 教授 椹木 哲夫, 教授 小森 雅晴 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Philosophy (Engineering) / Kyoto University / DFAM

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