Force Transfer Characterization of a Soft Exosuit for Gait Assistance

Citation:

B. Quinlivan, A. T. Asbeck, D. Wagner, T. Ranzani, S. Russo, and C. J. Walsh, “Force Transfer Characterization of a Soft Exosuit for Gait Assistance,” in ASME 2015 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences & Computers and Information in Engineering Conference (IDETC/CIE 2015), Boston, MA, USA, 2015.
PDF1.75 MB

Date Presented:

2-5 Aug 2015

Abstract:

Recently, there has been a growing interest in moving away from traditional rigid exoskeletons towards soft exosuits that can provide a variety of advantages including a reduction in both the weight carried by the wearer and the inertia experienced as the wearer flexes and extends their joints. These advantages are achieved by using structured functional textiles in combination with a flexible actuation scheme that enables assistive torques to be applied to the biological joints. Understanding the human-suit interface in these systems is important, as one of the key challenges with this approach is applying force to the human body in a manner that is safe, comfortable, and effective. This paper outlines a methodology for characterizing the structured functional textile of soft exosuits and then uses that methodology to evaluate several factors that lead to different suit-human series stiffnesses and pressure distributions over the body. These factors include the size of the force distribution area and the composition of the structured functional textile. Following the test results, design guidelines are suggested to maximize the safety, comfort, and efficiency of the exosuit.

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 05/16/2016