创建健壮的无源多环路可穿戴手部设备

N. Robson, Binyun Chen, J. Won, G. Soh
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摘要

本文描述了一种评估多环可穿戴设备的过程,该设备使用普通滑块被动驱动外指,用于手部活动受限的人的身体训练。每个手指的设计,除了拇指,是基于一个RRR系列链,称为骨干,约束成一个多环八杆滑块机构使用两个RR约束。拇指利用一个平面RR主链约束成一个平行的四杆滑块。在物理任务获取实验中,使用光学运动捕获捕获受试者的指尖轨迹,并设置其尺寸,使其尽可能地匹配每个手指的运动学。尺寸综合程序可以产生各种设计候选,以满足所需的指尖精确抓取轨迹。一旦确保合成的指尖运动接近生理指尖抓取轨迹,就会考虑与用户-设备干扰和关节自然角度运动相关的性能评估标准。在为每个手指选择了最喜欢的设计之后,进行一些小的修改,将骨干链替换为佩戴者的肢体,以提供定制被动装置的骨骼结构。为了说明所提出的技术,开发了一个被动驱动闭环铰接可穿戴(CLAW)手的三维原型模型。对CLAW手的耐磨性和鲁棒性进行了评估。对健康受试者的初步测试结果表明,CLAW手易于操作,能够引导使用者的手指而不会产生任何不适,确保了自然的抓取精度和力量。由于没有电动执行器和传感器,因此简化了控制,从而形成了一种轻量级且经济高效的解决方案,可用于抓取各种不同尺寸的物体。这项工作确立了在概念设计层面结合基于人类手指运动学模型的新型候选设计评估技术的重要性,该技术可以帮助找到具有自然关节运动的稳健候选设计。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Creating Robust Passive Multi-Loop Wearable Hand Devices
This paper describes a process for assessing multi-loop wearable devices that use a common slider to passively drive the exo-fingers for the physical training of people with limited hand mobility. Each finger design, except for the thumb, is based on an RRR serial chain, termed backbone, constrained into a multi-loop eight-bar slider mechanism using two RR constraints. The thumb utilizes a planar RR backbone chain constrained into a parallel four bar slider. During the physical task acquisition experiments, the subject’s tip finger trajectories are captured using an optical motion capture and its dimensions are set such that they match each of the fingers kinematics as closely as possible. The dimensional synthesis procedure can yield a variety of design candidates that fulfill the desired fingertip precision grasping trajectory. Once it is ensured that the synthesized fingertip motion is close to the physiological fingertip grasping trajectories, performance assessment criteria related to user-device interference and natural joint angle movement are taken into account. After the most preferred design for each finger is chosen, minor modifications related to substituting the backbone chain with the wearer’s limb to provide the skeletal structure of the customized passive device are made. To illustrate the proposed technique, the development of a 3D prototype model of a passively actuated Closed Loop Articulated Wearable (CLAW) hand is presented. The CLAW hand performance with respect to wear-ability and robustness was assessed. Preliminary test results with healthy subjects show that the CLAW hand is easy to operate and able to guide the user’s fingers without causing any discomfort, ensuring both, precision and power grasping in a natural manner. The lack of electrical actuators and sensors simplifies the control, resulting in a lightweight and cost-effective solution for grasping of a variety of objects with different sizes. This work establishes the importance of incorporating novel design candidate assessment techniques, based on human finger kinematic models, within the conceptual design level that can assist in finding robust design candidates with naturalistic joint motion.
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