TY - JOUR
T1 - Design synthesis and optimization of a 4-SPS intrinsically compliant parallel wrist rehabilitation robotic orthosis
AU - Hussain, Shahid
AU - Jamwal, Prashant K.
AU - Van Vliet, Paulette
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by FDCR Grant Program (Ref#021220FD0251). This work was also supported in part by the Seed Grant from the Faculty of Science and Technology, University of Canberra, Canberra, Australia.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s) 2021.
PY - 2021/12/1
Y1 - 2021/12/1
N2 - Neuroplasticity allows the human nervous system to adapt and relearn motor control following stroke. Rehabilitation therapy, which enhances neuroplasticity, can be made more effective if assisted by robotic tools. In this paper, a novel 4-SPS parallel robot has been developed to provide recovery of wrist movements post-stroke. The novel mechanism presented here was inspired by the forearm anatomy and can provide the rotational degrees of freedom required for all wrist movements. The robot design has been discussed in detail along with the necessary constructional, kinematic, and static analyses. The spatial workspace of the robot is estimated considering various dimensional and application-specific constraints besides checking for singular configurations. The wrist robot has been further evaluated using important performance indices such as condition number, actuator forces, and stiffness. The pneumatic artificial muscles exhibit varying stiffness, and therefore, workspace points are reached with different overall stiffness of the robot. It is essential to assess robot workspace points that can be reached with positive forces in actuators while maintaining a positive definite overall stiffness matrix. After the above analysis, design optimization has been carried out using an evolutionary algorithm whereby three critical criteria are optimized simultaneously for optimal wrist robot design.
AB - Neuroplasticity allows the human nervous system to adapt and relearn motor control following stroke. Rehabilitation therapy, which enhances neuroplasticity, can be made more effective if assisted by robotic tools. In this paper, a novel 4-SPS parallel robot has been developed to provide recovery of wrist movements post-stroke. The novel mechanism presented here was inspired by the forearm anatomy and can provide the rotational degrees of freedom required for all wrist movements. The robot design has been discussed in detail along with the necessary constructional, kinematic, and static analyses. The spatial workspace of the robot is estimated considering various dimensional and application-specific constraints besides checking for singular configurations. The wrist robot has been further evaluated using important performance indices such as condition number, actuator forces, and stiffness. The pneumatic artificial muscles exhibit varying stiffness, and therefore, workspace points are reached with different overall stiffness of the robot. It is essential to assess robot workspace points that can be reached with positive forces in actuators while maintaining a positive definite overall stiffness matrix. After the above analysis, design optimization has been carried out using an evolutionary algorithm whereby three critical criteria are optimized simultaneously for optimal wrist robot design.
KW - Compliant actuation
KW - Design optimization
KW - Parallel robot
KW - Stroke rehabilitation
KW - Wrist orthosis
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U2 - 10.1093/jcde/qwab061
DO - 10.1093/jcde/qwab061
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85121269183
SN - 2288-4300
VL - 8
SP - 1562
EP - 1575
JO - Journal of Computational Design and Engineering
JF - Journal of Computational Design and Engineering
IS - 6
ER -