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Running With an Elastic Lower Limb Exoskeleton.

Authors :
Cherry MS
Kota S
Young A
Ferris DP
Source :
Journal of applied biomechanics [J Appl Biomech] 2016 Jun; Vol. 32 (3), pp. 269-77. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Dec 22.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Although there have been many lower limb robotic exoskeletons that have been tested for human walking, few devices have been tested for assisting running. It is possible that a pseudo-passive elastic exoskeleton could benefit human running without the addition of electrical motors due to the spring-like behavior of the human leg. We developed an elastic lower limb exoskeleton that added stiffness in parallel with the entire lower limb. Six healthy, young subjects ran on a treadmill at 2.3 m/s with and without the exoskeleton. Although the exoskeleton was designed to provide ~50% of normal leg stiffness during running, it only provided 24% of leg stiffness during testing. The difference in added leg stiffness was primarily due to soft tissue compression and harness compliance decreasing exoskeleton displacement during stance. As a result, the exoskeleton only supported about 7% of the peak vertical ground reaction force. There was a significant increase in metabolic cost when running with the exoskeleton compared with running without the exoskeleton (ANOVA, P < .01). We conclude that 2 major roadblocks to designing successful lower limb robotic exoskeletons for human running are human-machine interface compliance and the extra lower limb inertia from the exoskeleton.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1543-2688
Volume :
32
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of applied biomechanics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26694976
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1123/jab.2015-0155