Design and Actuator Optimization of Lightweight and Compliant Knee Exoskeleton for Mobility Assistance of Children with Crouch Gait
Sainan Zhang, Tzu-Hao Huang, Chunhai Jiao, Mhairi MacLean, Junxi Zhu,, Shuangyue Yu, Hao Su

TL;DR
This paper presents a lightweight, compliant pediatric knee exoskeleton with optimized actuators tailored for children aged 3 to 18, enhancing mobility assistance for crouch gait with improved performance and adaptability.
Contribution
It introduces the first optimization framework for pediatric exoskeleton actuators considering both motor and transmission, tailored to different ages and improving design adaptability.
Findings
Exoskeleton weighs 1.65 kg per side with high bandwidth.
Achieves low mechanical impedance and accurate torque tracking.
Optimization results vary motor and gear parameters with age.
Abstract
Pediatric exoskeletons offer great promise to increase mobility for children with crouch gait caused by cerebral palsy. A lightweight, compliant and user-specific actuator is critical for maximizing the benefits of an exoskeleton to users. To date, pediatric exoskeletons generally use the same actuators as adult exoskeletons, which are heavy and resistive to natural movement. There is yet no easy way for robotic exoskeletons to accommodate the changes in design requirements that occur as a child ages. We developed a lightweight (1.65 kg unilateral mass) and compliant pediatric knee exoskeleton with a bandwidth of 22.6 Hz that can provide torque assistance to children with crouch gait using high torque density motor. Experimental results demonstrated that the robot exhibited low mechanical impedance (1.79 Nm average backdrive torque) under the unpowered condition and 0.32 Nm with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProsthetics and Rehabilitation Robotics · Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders · Spinal Cord Injury Research
