Design, Characterization, and Validation of a Variable Stiffness Prosthetic Elbow
Giuseppe Milazzo, Simon Lemerle, Giorgio Grioli, Antonio Bicchi, and Manuel G. Catalano

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel, lightweight variable stiffness prosthetic elbow design that mimics natural joint behavior, offering enhanced safety, adaptability, and comfort for users with transhumeral amputations.
Contribution
It introduces a new variable stiffness actuator design optimized for prosthetic elbows, reducing weight by 50% while maintaining high performance and adaptability.
Findings
Achieves 120° range of motion and 3 kg lifting capacity.
Meets stiffness range of [2, 60] Nm/rad.
Reduces weight significantly compared to existing solutions.
Abstract
Intuitively, prostheses with user-controllable stiffness could mimic the intrinsic behavior of the human musculoskeletal system, promoting safe and natural interactions and task adaptability in real-world scenarios. However, prosthetic design often disregards compliance because of the additional complexity, weight, and needed control channels. This paper focuses on designing a Variable Stiffness Actuator (VSA) with weight, size, and performance compatible with prosthetic applications, addressing its implementation for the elbow joint. While a direct biomimetic approach suggests adopting an Agonist-Antagonist (AA) layout to replicate the biceps and triceps brachii with elastic actuation, this solution is not optimal to accommodate the varied morphologies of residual limbs. Instead, we employed the AA layout to craft an elbow prosthesis fully contained in the user's forearm, catering to…
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