A rigid-body method for finding centers of rotation and angular displacements of planar joint motion

1987 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 715-721 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey J. Spiegelman ◽  
Savio L.-Y. Woo
1989 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 255-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmie Hsu ◽  
Steve Bardfield ◽  
Bryant J. Cratty ◽  
Alan Garfinkel

This pilot study was conducted to test the usefulness of angle-angle diagrams and phase plane plots obtained through high-speed cinematographical methods for making graded assessments of associated movements in children. Kinematic data at the shoulder, elbow, and ankle joints of normal and motorically awkward children (5-7 years old) were obtained from digitized films of normal and heel walking trials on a motor driven treadmill. A computer program was developed to smooth, calculate, differentiate, and plot data. Angle-angle diagrams depicting simultaneous joint angular displacements of (a) shoulder versus ankle and (b) elbow versus ankle revealed graded differences in decoupling of joint motion, limb excursions, and joint range-of-motion changes between the 5-year-old, 7-year-old awkward, and 7-year-old normal subject. Phase planes of the shoulder, elbow, and ankle joint were obtained by plotting joint angular displacement against joint angular velocity. Differences in size, shape, and looping behavior showed the quantity of change and whether the changes were gradual or sudden. This noninvasive methodology and eventual standardization of angle-angle diagrams and phase planes could prove to be useful in providing more precise diagnoses of associated movements and other subtle movement disorders.


Author(s):  
Guimin Chen ◽  
Shouyin Zhang

Although there are many examples of multistable compliant mechanisms in the literature, most of them are of planar configurations. Considering that a multistable mechanism providing spatial motion could be useful in numerous applications, this paper explores the multistable behavior of the overconstrained spatial Sarrus mechanisms with compliant joints (CSMs). The kinetostatics of CSMs have been formulated based on the pseudo-rigid-body method. The kinetostatic results show that a CSM is capable of exhibiting bistability, tristability, and quadristability. Possible applications of multistable CSMs include deployable structures, static balancing of human/robot bodies and weight compensators.


Author(s):  
Vitthal Khatik ◽  
Shyam Sunder Nishad ◽  
Anupam Saxena

Abstract It is rare that existing prosthetic/orthotic designs are based on kinetostatics of a biological finger, especially its tendon- pulley system (TPS). Whether a biological TPS is optimal for use as a reference, say for design purposes, and if so in what sense, is also relatively unknown. We expect an optimal TPS to yield high range of flexion while operating with lower tendon tension, bowstringing, and pulley stresses. To gain insight into the TPS designs, we present a parametric study which is then used to determine optimal TPS configurations for the flexor mechanism. A compliant, flexure-based computational model is developed and simulated using the pseudo rigid body method, with various combinations of pulley/tendon attachment point locations, pulley heights, and widths. Results suggest that three distinct types of TPS configurations corresponding to single stiff pulley, or two stiff pulleys, or one stiff and one flexible-inextensible pulley per phalange can be optimal. For a TPS configuration similar to a biological one, the distal pulleys on the proximal and intermediate phalanges need to be like flexible-inextensible string loops that effectively model the behavior of joint and cruciate pulleys. We reckon that a biological flexor TPS may have evolved to maximize flexion range with minimum possible actuation tension, bowstringing and pulley stress. Our findings may be useful in not only developing efficient hand devices, but also in improving TPS reconstruction surgery procedures.


2010 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 634-639 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu Pei ◽  
Jingjun Yu ◽  
Guanghua Zong ◽  
Shusheng Bi

2009 ◽  
Vol 16-19 ◽  
pp. 544-548 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shu Wen Zhou ◽  
Hai Shu Chen ◽  
Si Qi Zhang ◽  
Li Xin Guo

Rollover and jack-knifing of tractor semitrailer on high speed obstacle avoidance under emergency are serious threats for motorists. A tractor semitrailer model was built with multi-rigid-body method in this paper. The steering performance of tractor semitrailer has been analyzed, as well as the stability control theory, including yaw rate following, anti-rollover. The dynamics simulation for yaw rate following and anti-rollover has been performed on the dynamic tractor semitrailer. The results show that the vehicle dynamics control proposed in this paper can stabilize the tractor semitrailer, rollover and jack-knifing are prevented and the tractor semitrailer more accurately follows the driver's desired path.


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