4.6 Article

Design, implementation, and evaluation of a backstepping control algorithm for an active ankle-foot orthosis

Journal

CONTROL ENGINEERING PRACTICE
Volume 106, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.conengprac.2020.104667

Keywords

Exoskeleton; Ankle-foot orthosis; Adaptive control; Disturbance parametrization

Funding

  1. Bogazici University Research Fund, Turkey [9781]

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An active ankle-foot orthosis prototype is developed with an adaptive backstepping control algorithm to track desired gait trajectories and reduce unknown disturbances. The prototype consists of a series elastic actuator, a lever mechanism, and an orthotic shoe, and is mathematically modeled as a two-degree-of-freedom mass-spring system. The proposed control algorithm is implemented in a real-time operating system, demonstrating superior trajectory tracking performance over a PID controller in numerical simulations and physical experiments.
Active ankle-foot orthoses are used to assist patients suffering from stroke, multiple sclerosis, cerebral palsy etc. through providing them an external force supply to track normal gait cycles. In this paper, an active ankle-foot orthosis prototype is developed and an adaptive backstepping control algorithm is proposed for tracking desired gait trajectories while reducing the effects of unknown disturbances. A prototype of the orthosis, which is composed of a series elastic actuator, a lever mechanism and an orthotic shoe, is developed. The prototype is mathematically modeled as a two-degree-of-freedom mass-spring system. The unknown disturbances are modeled as a finite sum of sinusoidal signals with unknown amplitudes, frequencies and phases, and an unknown constant. The backstepping control algorithm is designed for the force input supplied to the system, and the stability of the equilibrium point is proved. The proposed algorithm is implemented in a real-time operating system to control the developed ankle-foot orthosis prototype. Numerical simulations and physical experiments on healthy human subjects are performed to show the superiority of the proposed design over a PID controller in trajectory tracking of the prototype. As a further development, an embedded system is designed to bring portability to the ankle-foot orthosis prototype. Experiments are performed to observe the execution performance and power consumption of the embedded system.

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