Title :
Design of a pneumatically powered wearable exoskeleton with biomimetic support and actuation
Author :
Sergeyev, Anton ; Alaraje, N. ; Seidel, C. ; Carlson, Z. ; Breda, B.
Author_Institution :
Electr. & Comput. Eng. Technol., Michigan Technol. Univ., Houghton, MI, USA
Abstract :
Powered exoskeletons are designed to assist and protect the wearer. Depending on the situation they may be used to protect soldiers and construction workers, aid the survival of people in dangerous environments, or assist patients in rehabilitation. Regardless of the application there are strict requirements for designing and producing exoskeleton suites. They must be durable but light weight and flexible, have reliable power control and modulation, capable of detecting unsafe and invalid motions, and may require significant weight lifting capabilities. In this article we present an on-going research on robotic exoskeleton replicating of human muscle functions. A single wearable knee-joint prototype described in this article combines the use of soft pneumatic muscle-like actuators and a control system based off the users own natural muscle signals. The Pneumatic Exoskeleton uses bioelectrical signals to detect movement intention from the pilot. This paper details the technical design aspects of a lower-limb robotic exoskeleton with possibility of further expansion to fully functioning robotic exoskeleton suit.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biomimetics; human-robot interaction; neuromuscular stimulation; occupational safety; pneumatic actuators; power control; bioelectrical signals; biomimetic support; construction worker protection; control system; dangerous environments; exoskeleton suite design; human muscle function replication; invalid motion detection; lower-limb robotic exoskeleton; movement intention detection; natural muscle signals; patient rehabilitation; pneumatically powered wearable exoskeleton design; power control; power modulation; soft pneumatic muscle-like actuators; soldier protection; technical design; unsafe motion detection; wearable knee-joint prototype; wearer protection; weight lifting capabilities; Electromyography; Exoskeletons; Field programmable gate arrays; Muscles; Pneumatic systems; Robots; Vents;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1812-9
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2013.6496857