Optimally Controlling the Timing of Energy Transfer in Elastic Joints: Experimental Validation of the Bi-Stiffness Actuation Concept
Edmundo Pozo Fortuni\'c, Mehmet C. Yildirim, Dennis Ossadnik, Abdalla, Swikir, Saeed Abdolshah, and Sami Haddadin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel Bi-Stiffness Actuation (BSA) concept, validated through a prototype, that enables precise control over energy transfer timing in elastic joints, outperforming traditional SEA in dynamic tasks.
Contribution
The work presents the first physical implementation and experimental validation of the BSA concept, demonstrating improved control and performance over existing elastic actuation methods.
Findings
BSA achieves higher maximum velocity at low final times.
BSA generates more consistent launch sequences.
Full control over energy transfer enhances energy exploitation.
Abstract
Elastic actuation taps into elastic elements' energy storage for dynamic motions beyond rigid actuation. While Series Elastic Actuators (SEA) and Variable Stiffness Actuators (VSA) are highly sophisticated, they do not fully provide control over energy transfer timing. To overcome this problem on the basic system level, the Bi-Stiffness Actuation (BSA) concept was recently proposed. Theoretically, it allows for full link decoupling, while simultaneously being able to lock the spring in the drive train via a switch-and-hold mechanism. Thus, the user would be in full control of the potential energy storage and release timing. In this work, we introduce an initial proof-of-concept of Bi-Stiffness-Actuation in the form of a 1-DoF physical prototype, which is implemented using a modular testbed. We present a hybrid system model, as well as the mechatronic implementation of the actuator. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPiezoelectric Actuators and Control · Vibration Control and Rheological Fluids · Muscle activation and electromyography studies
