4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Quasi-Direct Drive Actuation for a Lightweight Hip Exoskeleton With High Backdrivability and High Bandwidth

Journal

IEEE-ASME TRANSACTIONS ON MECHATRONICS
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 1794-1802

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMECH.2020.2995134

Keywords

Torque; Exoskeletons; Actuators; Hip; Brushless motors; Bandwidth; Permanent magnet motors; Exoskeleton; high-torque actuator; human augmentation; quasi-direct drive (QDD) actuation; wearable robots

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [IIS 1830613]
  2. NIH [R01EB029765]
  3. Grove School of Engineering, The City University of New York, City College
  4. CMMI [1944655]

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High-performance actuators are crucial to enable mechanical versatility of wearable robots, which are required to be lightweight, highly backdrivable, and with high bandwidth. State-of-the-art actuators, e.g., series elastic actuators, have to compromise bandwidth to improve compliance (i.e., backdrivability). In this article, we describe the design and human-robot interaction modeling of a portable hip exoskeleton based on our custom quasi-direct drive actuation (i.e., a high torque density motor with low ratio gear). We also present a model-based performance benchmark comparison of representative actuators in terms of torque capability, control bandwidth, backdrivability, and force tracking accuracy. This article aims to corroborate the underlying philosophy of design for control, namely meticulous robot design can simplify control algorithms while ensuring high performance. Following this idea, we create a lightweight bilateral hip exoskeleton to reduce joint loadings during normal activities, including walking and squatting. Experiments indicate that the exoskeleton is able to produce high nominal torque (17.5 Nm), high backdrivability (0.4 Nm backdrive torque), high bandwidth (62.4 Hz), and high control accuracy (1.09 Nm root mean square tracking error, 5.4% of the desired peak torque). Its controller is versatile to assist walking at different speeds and squatting. This article demonstrates performance improvement compared with state-of-the-art exoskeletons.

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