Rachael M Granberry, Santo Padula, Kevin Eschen, Julianna Abel, Brad Holschuh
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While other chemistries of SMA having lower actuation temperatures used for medical devices inside the human body (T<sub>core</sub> ≈ 37°C) are commonly available, SMA has not been optimized for actuation control against the human skin (T<sub>S</sub> ≈ 31°C). This research characterizes and validates a novel SMA material designed by Fort Wayne Metals specifically for actuation adjacent to the surface of the body. Through experimental temperature-force-displacement testing on both Dynalloy Flexinol® and Fort Wayne Metals straight SMA wire and SMA knitted actuator configurations, we present data that suggests (1) performance differences between low-temperature, nickel-rich SMA (Fort Wayne Metals) and high-temperature, titanium-rich SMA (Dynalloy Flexinol®) are negated by certain SMA knitted actuator structures, and (2) certain SMA knitted actuator configurations increase in force upon cool down, offering new concepts for SMA system actuation/control that minimize power consumption and waste heat. This manuscript presents experimental evidence for a future OIG that is donned in an oversized and compliant state, heated momentarily above ambient skin temperature to initiate actuation, and remain fully 'activated' once the actuation is complete upon equilibration with skin temperature. The result is an OIG that requires low-operating power that could be doffed through zipper releases and placed in a sub-zero chamber to return the structure to the 'off' state for reuse.</p>","PeriodicalId":93009,"journal":{"name":"International Conference on Environmental Systems. 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Through experimental temperature-force-displacement testing on both Dynalloy Flexinol® and Fort Wayne Metals straight SMA wire and SMA knitted actuator configurations, we present data that suggests (1) performance differences between low-temperature, nickel-rich SMA (Fort Wayne Metals) and high-temperature, titanium-rich SMA (Dynalloy Flexinol®) are negated by certain SMA knitted actuator structures, and (2) certain SMA knitted actuator configurations increase in force upon cool down, offering new concepts for SMA system actuation/control that minimize power consumption and waste heat. This manuscript presents experimental evidence for a future OIG that is donned in an oversized and compliant state, heated momentarily above ambient skin temperature to initiate actuation, and remain fully 'activated' once the actuation is complete upon equilibration with skin temperature. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
主动收缩面料是一种新兴的创新,可以通过按需收缩来彻底改变航空航天压缩服装技术,特别是直立不耐受服装(OIG)。先前的研究发现,主动收缩织物,特别是由形状记忆合金(SMA)长丝构成的纬编织吊袜带织物结构,可以在身体上施加2-54毫米汞柱(单层结构)或4-104毫米汞柱(双层结构),具体取决于身体半径。先前的服装原型设计和性能验证工作是使用市售的Flexinol®线进行的,其驱动完成温度为90°C,这是一个不适合接近人体的温度。虽然SMA的其他化学物质通常具有较低的驱动温度,用于人体内部的医疗设备(Tcore≈37°C),但SMA尚未针对人体皮肤的驱动控制(TS≈31°C)进行优化。本研究表征并验证了由Fort Wayne Metals设计的一种新型SMA材料,该材料专门用于靠近身体表面的驱动。通过对Dynalloy Flexinol®和Fort Wayne Metals的直线型SMA钢丝和SMA针织致动器配置的实验温度-力-位移测试,我们提出的数据表明:(1)某些SMA针织致动器结构抵消了低温富镍SMA (Fort Wayne Metals)和高温富钛SMA (Dynalloy Flexinol®)之间的性能差异,以及(2)某些SMA针织致动器配置在冷却时力增加。为SMA系统驱动/控制提供新概念,最大限度地减少功耗和废热。本手稿提出了未来OIG的实验证据,该OIG在超大和合规状态下穿着,加热暂时高于环境皮肤温度以启动驱动,并在与皮肤温度平衡后完成驱动后保持完全“激活”。其结果是,OIG需要低工作功率,可以通过拉链释放并放置在零下的腔室中,以使结构恢复到“关闭”状态,以便重复使用。
Design and Control of Reduced Power Actuation for Active-Contracting Orthostatic Intolerance Garments.
Active-contracting fabrics are an emerging innovation that could revolutionize aerospace compression garment technology, notably orthostatic intolerance garments (OIG), by contracting on demand. Prior research has found that active-contracting fabrics, specifically weft knit garter fabric architectures constructed with shape memory alloy (SMA) filaments, can apply 2-54 mmHg on the body (single-layer construction) or 4-104 mmHg (double layer construction), depending on body radius. Prior garment prototyping and performance validation efforts have been conducted with commercially available Flexinol® wire with an actuation finish temperature of 90°C, a temperature that is not appropriate proximal to the human body. While other chemistries of SMA having lower actuation temperatures used for medical devices inside the human body (Tcore ≈ 37°C) are commonly available, SMA has not been optimized for actuation control against the human skin (TS ≈ 31°C). This research characterizes and validates a novel SMA material designed by Fort Wayne Metals specifically for actuation adjacent to the surface of the body. Through experimental temperature-force-displacement testing on both Dynalloy Flexinol® and Fort Wayne Metals straight SMA wire and SMA knitted actuator configurations, we present data that suggests (1) performance differences between low-temperature, nickel-rich SMA (Fort Wayne Metals) and high-temperature, titanium-rich SMA (Dynalloy Flexinol®) are negated by certain SMA knitted actuator structures, and (2) certain SMA knitted actuator configurations increase in force upon cool down, offering new concepts for SMA system actuation/control that minimize power consumption and waste heat. This manuscript presents experimental evidence for a future OIG that is donned in an oversized and compliant state, heated momentarily above ambient skin temperature to initiate actuation, and remain fully 'activated' once the actuation is complete upon equilibration with skin temperature. The result is an OIG that requires low-operating power that could be doffed through zipper releases and placed in a sub-zero chamber to return the structure to the 'off' state for reuse.