Publication | Closed Access
Characterizing Architectures of Soft Pneumatic Actuators for a Cable-Driven Shoulder Exoskeleton
17
Citations
16
References
2019
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringKinesiologySoft RoboticsLow WeightBiomechanicsPennate ArchitecturesKinematicsSoft Pneumatic ActuatorsExoskeletonMechatronicsBiomimetic ActuatorCable-driven Shoulder ExoskeletonActuationPneumaticsMechanical SystemsWearable RoboticsInnate ComplianceRoboticsActuators
Low weight and innate compliance make soft pneumatic actuators an attractive method for actuating wearable robots. Performance of soft pneumatic actuators can be tailored to an application by combining them in novel architectures. We modeled and constructed nested linear and pennate architectures using fiber-reinforced elastomeric enclosures (FREEs) with identical manufacturing parameters and total effective lengths to compare their suitability for a cable-driven exoskeleton for augmenting shoulder flexion. We determined actuator performance requirements using a static model for the transmission of actuator forces to the upper arm via Bowden cables. We experimentally characterized the architectures by measuring their force-displacement curves at a range of pressures, yielding greater force and displacement from the nested architecture in the domain required by our exoskeleton. Results also indicated a force threshold above which the pennate structure produced greater force at any given displacement. We validated the nested linear architecture using a prototype exoskeleton installed on a passive mannequin. Measured joint angles at varying pressures were close to predicted values, adjusted for measured losses due to cable anchor movement.
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