Home /Research /Adaptive Impedance Control for an Upper Limb Robotic Exoskeleton Using Biological Signals
LEARNING

Adaptive Impedance Control for an Upper Limb Robotic Exoskeleton Using Biological Signals

Zhijun Li, Zhicong Huang, Wei He, Chun‐Yi Su

Year
2016
Citations
319

Abstract

This paper presents adaptive impedance control of an upper limb robotic exoskeleton using biological signals. First, we develop a reference musculoskeletal model of the human upper limb and experimentally calibrate the model to match the operator's motion behavior. Then, the proposed novel impedance algorithm transfers stiffness from human operator through the surface electromyography (sEMG) signals, being utilized to design the optimal reference impedance model. Considering the unknown deadzone effects in the robot joints and the absence of the precise knowledge of the robot's dynamics, an adaptive neural network control incorporating with a high-gain observer is developed to approximate the deadzone effect and robot's dynamics and drive the robot tracking desired trajectories without velocity measurements. In order to verify the robustness of the proposed approach, the actual implementation has been performed using a real robotic exoskeleton and a human operator.

Keywords

ExoskeletonControl theory (sociology)Robustness (evolution)RobotImpedance controlEngineeringAdaptive controlElectrical impedanceRobot kinematicsMechanical impedance

Related papers

Browse all LEARNING papers