4.7 Article

A Human Lower Limb Mechanical Phantom for the Testing of Knee Exoskeletons

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNSRE.2023.3276424

Keywords

Knee; Exoskeletons; Couplings; Phantoms; Legged locomotion; Biological tissues; Testing; Ballistic gel; knee exoskeleton; lower limb; mechanical phantom; soft tissue deformation; stiffness

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The development of assistive lower-limb exoskeletons is time-consuming and testing them on vulnerable populations such as children raises safety concerns. Mechanical phantoms that replicate lower-limb kinematics provide a fast validation method for exoskeletons, but most phantoms fail to capture soft tissue deformation at the human/exoskeleton interface. We have developed a methodology using a mechanical phantom capable of emulating knee kinematics and soft tissue deformation to quickly test and validate knee exoskeletons.
The development of assistive lower-limb exoskeletons can be time-consuming. Testing prototype medical devices on vulnerable populations such as children also has safety concerns. Mechanical phantoms replicating the lower-limb kinematics provide an alternative for the fast validation and iteration of exoskeletons. However, most phantoms treat the limbs as rigid bodies and fail to capture soft tissue deformation at the human/exoskeleton interface. Human soft tissue can absorb and dissipate energy when compressed, leading to a mismatch between simulated and human exoskeleton testing outcomes. We have developed a methodology for quickly testing and validating the performance of knee exoskeletons using a mechanical phantom capable of emulating knee kinematics soft-tissue deformation of the lower-limb. Our phantom consisted of 3D-printed bones surrounded by ballistic gel. A motorized hexapod moved the knee to follow a walking trajectory. A custom inverse dynamics model estimated the knee assistance moment from marker and load cell data. We applied this methodology to quantify the effects of soft-tissue deformation on exoskeleton assistance by loading the phantom knee with a torsional spring exoskeleton interfacing and bypassing the ballistic gel. We found that including soft-tissue deformation led to a lower knee assistance moment and stiffness. Some but not all of this difference could be explained by the deflection of the exoskeleton relative to the knee angle, suggesting energy absorption within soft tissue. The direct measurements of exoskeleton assistance provide insight into increasing the assistive moment transmission efficacy. The phantom provided a relatively accurate framework for knee exoskeleton testing, aiding future exoskeleton design.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available