DocumentCode
3600830
Title
Design of a Robotic System to Measure Propulsion Work of Over-Ground Wheelchair Maneuvers
Author
Liles, Howard ; Huang, Morris ; Caspall, Jayme ; Sprigle, Stephen
Author_Institution
Pratt & Whitney, Hartford, CT, USA
Volume
23
Issue
6
fYear
2015
Firstpage
983
Lastpage
991
Abstract
A wheelchair-propelling robot has been developed to measure the efficiency of manual wheelchairs. The use of a robot has certain advantages compared to the use of human operators with respect to repeatability of measurements and the ability to compare many more wheelchair configurations than possible with human operators. Its design and implementation required significant engineering and validation of hardware and control systems. The robot can propel a wheelchair according to pre-programmed accelerations and velocities and measures the forces required to achieve these maneuvers. Wheel velocities were within 0.1 m/s of programmed values and coefficients of variation . Torque measurements were also repeatable with . By determining the propulsion torque required to propel the wheelchair through a series of canonical maneuvers, task-dependent input work for various wheelchairs and configurations can be compared. This metric would serve to quantify the combined inertial and frictional resistance of the mechanical system.
Keywords
acceleration; acceleration control; acceleration measurement; friction; medical robotics; torque; torque control; torque measurement; velocity control; velocity measurement; wheelchairs; canonical maneuvers; coefficients-of-variation; control systems; frictional resistance; hardware validation; human operators; inertial resistance; manual wheelchairs; measurement repeatability; mechanical system; over-ground wheelchair maneuvers; preprogrammed accelerations; programmed values; propulsion torque; propulsion work measurement; robotic system design; task-dependent input work; torque measurements; wheel velocities; wheelchair configurations; wheelchair-propelling robot; DC motors; Force; Manuals; Propulsion; Torque; Wheelchairs; Wheels; Anatomical; inertia; mechanical design; mechanical torque; model; power; propulsion; repeatability; resistive loss; robotic; wheelchair;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2014.2371339
Filename
6960058
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