Biomechanics-Informed Mechatronics Design of Comfort-Centered Portable Hip Exoskeleton: Actuator, Wearable Interface, Controller

Daniel Rodriguez-Jorge, Sainan Zhang, Jin Sen Huang, Ivan Lopez-Sanchez, Nitin Srinivasan, Qiang Zhang, Xianlian Zhou, Hao Su

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Exoskeletons can improve human mobility, but discomfort remains a significant barrier to their widespread adoption. This paper presents a comfort-centered mechatronics design of portable hip exoskeletons, comprising of three factors: (i) actuation, (ii) wearable interface, (iii) and assistive controller. We introduced an analytical multibody model to predict the human-exoskeleton contact forces during gait. Informed by this model, we designed a wearable interface that significantly improved the three considered objective metrics: (i) undesired contact forces at the wearable interface, (ii) wobbling, and (iii) metabolic reduction, and also the post-test evaluation via a System Usability Scale questionnaire as a subjective metric. Our experiments with two exoskeleton controllers (gait-based and reinforcement learning-based) demonstrated that the design of the wearable physical interface has a greater impact on reducing metabolic rate and minimizing wobbling than the choice of controller. Our actuation design method leads to highly backdrivable, lightweight quasi-direct drive actuators with high torque tracking performance. By leveraging this wearable design, we achieved up to 60% reduction in undesired contact forces, and a 74% reduction in exoskeleton wobbling in the frontal axis compared to a traditional configuration. Additionally, the net metabolic cost reduction was 18% compared to the no exoskeleton condition.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)687-698
Number of pages12
JournalIEEE Transactions on Medical Robotics and Bionics
Volume7
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Mechatronics design
  • analytical multibody model
  • biomechanics
  • hip exoskeleton
  • metabolic cost

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biomedical Engineering
  • Human-Computer Interaction
  • Computer Science Applications
  • Control and Optimization
  • Artificial Intelligence

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