4.0 Article

Energetics of Walking With a Robotic Knee Exoskeleton

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED BIOMECHANICS
Volume 35, Issue 5, Pages 320-326

Publisher

HUMAN KINETICS PUBL INC
DOI: 10.1123/jab.2018-0384

Keywords

locomotion; robotics; biomechanics; assistance; terrain

Funding

  1. Lockheed Martin Corporation

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The authors tested 4 young healthy subjects walking with a powered knee exoskeleton to determine if it could reduce the metabolic cost of locomotion. Subjects walked with a backpack loaded and unloaded, on a treadmill with inclinations of 0 degrees and 15 degrees, and outdoors with varied natural terrain. Participants walked at a self-selected speed (average 1.0 m/s) for all conditions, except incline treadmill walking (average 0.5 m/s). The authors hypothesized that the knee exoskeleton would reduce the metabolic cost of walking uphill and with a load compared with walking without the exoskeleton. The knee exoskeleton reduced metabolic cost by 4.2% in the 15 degrees incline with the backpack load. All other conditions had an increase in metabolic cost when using the knee exoskeleton compared with not using the exoskeleton. There was more variation in metabolic cost over the outdoor walking course with the knee exoskeleton than without it. Our findings indicate that powered assistance at the knee is more likely to decrease the metabolic cost of walking in uphill conditions and during loaded walking rather than in level conditions without a backpack load. Differences in positive mechanical work demand at the knee for varying conditions may explain the differences in metabolic benefit from the exoskeleton.

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