Abstract:
Muscle weakness owing to stroke, spinal cord injuries, or aging can make a person's life
sedentary, temporarily as well as permanently. Such persons need to be motivated to break their sedentary
postures and attempt independent motion. A key motivator in this aspect is the ability to easily transition from
seated to standing posture. If this sit-to-stand transition (STSt) is easy, it will encourage further mobility.
A soft wearable device that can assist the STSt, would ll this need perfectly. Such a device should be
able to seamlessly assist during STSt and be unobtrusive during sitting. A major limitation that is currently
holding back the development of soft exosuits in STSt-assist is the lack of low-pro le soft actuators with
high strain rate and force-to-weight ratio. Hence, we propose a novel low-pro le vacuum actuator (LPVAc)
with an integrated inductive displacement sensor that, can be rapidly fabricated, is lightweight (14 g), and
can provide high strain (65%) and a high force-to-weight ratio (285 times self-weight). The proposed
actuator comprises a low-pro le spring encased within a low-density polyethylene lm with rapid vacuum
actuation and passive quick return. The proposed inductive sensor has a sensitivity of 0.0022 H=mm and
the hysteresis is below 1.5% with an overall absolute average error percentage of 5.24%. The performance
of the proposed integrated sensor in displacement control of the LPVAc is experimentally evaluated. The
proposed actuator is integrated into a novel mono-articular STSt-assist exosuit for preliminary testing.
Surface electromyography measurements of the gluteus maximus muscles during STSt indicate a mean
muscle activity reduction of 45%. This supports the potential use of the proposed actuator in STSt-assist.
Citation:
Kulasekera, A. L., Arumathanthri, R. B., Chathuranga, D. S., Gopura, R. A. R. C., & Lalitharatne, T. D. (2021). A Low-Profile vacuum actuator (LPVAc) withiIntegrated inductive displacement sensing for a novel sit-to-stand assist exosuit. IEEE Access, 9, 117067–117079. https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3106319