Combined kinematic and static analysis of an articulated lower limb traction device for a rehabilitation robotic system

Author(s):  
Yuan Li ◽  
Bin Zi ◽  
ZhengMeng Yang ◽  
Jeffrey Ge
Author(s):  
Dorin Popescu ◽  
Horatiu Roibu ◽  
Cristian Petre Copilusi ◽  
Ligia Rusu ◽  
Taina Elena Avramescu ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Bogdan Gherman ◽  
Iosif Birlescu ◽  
Paul Tucan ◽  
Calin Vaida ◽  
Adrian Pisla ◽  
...  

As the life span increases and the availability of physicians becomes more and more scarce, robotic rehabilitation for post-stroke patients becomes more and more demanding, especially due to the repeatability character of the rehabilitation exercises. Both lower and upper limb rehabilitation using robotic systems have proved to be very successful in different stages of the rehabilitation process, but only a few address the immediate (critical) post-stroke phase, especially when the patient is hemiplegic and is unable to stand. The paper presents the kinematic modelling, singularity analysis and gait simulation for a new 4-DOF parallel robot named RECOVER used for lower limb rehabilitation for bedridden patients. The robotic system has been designed for the mobilization of the lower limb, namely the following motions: the hip and knee flexion and the plantar adduction/abduction and flexion/dorsiflexion. The kinematics has been studied and the singularity configurations have been determined to achieve a failsafe rehabilitation robot. Numerical simulations prove that the system can be used for gait training exercises in safe conditions.


Author(s):  
Z. Bien ◽  
D.-J. Kim ◽  
D. H. Stefanov ◽  
J.-S. Han ◽  
H.-S. Park ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 2109-2115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dollaporn Anopas ◽  
Sing Yian Chew ◽  
Junquan Lin ◽  
Seng Kwee Wee ◽  
Tow Peh Er ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tsung-Chin Tsai ◽  
Mao-Hsiung Chiang

This study determines the practicality and feasibility of the application of pneumatic artificial muscles (PAMs) in a pneumatic therapy robotic system. The novel mechanism consists of a single actuated pneumatic artificial muscle (single-PAM) robotic lower limb that is driven by only one PAM combined with a torsion spring. Unlike most of previous studies, which used dual-actuated pneumatic artificial muscles (dual-PAMs) to drive joints, this design aims to develop a novel single-PAM for a one degree-of-freedom (1-DOF) robotic lower-limb system with the advantage of a mechanism for developing a multi-axial therapy robotic system. The lower limb robotic assisting system uses the stretching/contraction characteristics of a single-PAM and the torsion spring designed by the mechanism to realize joint position control. The joint is driven by a single-PAM controlled by a proportional pressure valve, a designed 1-DOF lower-limb robotic system, and an experimental prototype system similar to human lower limbs are established. However, the non-linear behavior, high hysteresis, low damping and time-variant characteristics for a PAM with a torsion spring still limits its controllability. In order to control the system, a fuzzy sliding mode controller (FSMC) is used to control the path tracking for the PAM for the first time. This control method prevents approximation errors, disturbances, un-modeled dynamics and ensures positioning performance for the whole system. Consequently, from the various experimental results, the control response designed by the joint torsion spring mechanism can also obtain the control response like the design of the double-PAMs mechanism, which proves that the innovative single-PAM with torsion spring mechanism design in this study can reduce the size of the overall aid mechanism and reduce the manufacturing cost, can also improve the portability and convenience required for the wearable accessory, and is more suitable for the portable rehabilitation aid system architecture.


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