Temperature prediction in high speed bone grinding using motor PWM signal. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • This research explores the feasibility of using motor electrical feedback to estimate temperature rise during a surgical bone grinding procedure. High-speed bone grinding is often used during skull base neurosurgery to remove cranial bone and approach skull base tumors through the nasal corridor. Grinding-induced heat could propagate and potentially injure surrounding nerves and arteries, and therefore, predicting the temperature in the grinding region would benefit neurosurgeons during the operation. High-speed electric motors are controlled by pulse-width-modulation (PWM) to alter the current input and thus maintain the rotational speed. Assuming full mechanical to thermal power conversion in the grinding process, PWM can be used as feedback for heat generation and temperature prediction. In this study, the conversion model was established from experiments under a variety of grinding conditions and an inverse heat transfer method to determine heat flux. Given a constant rotational speed, the heat conversion was represented by a linear function, and could predict temperature from the experimental data with less than 20% errors. Such results support the advance of this technology for practical application.

published proceedings

  • Med Eng Phys

author list (cited authors)

  • Tai, B. L., Zhang, L., Wang, A. C., Sullivan, S., Wang, G., & Shih, A. J.

citation count

  • 21

complete list of authors

  • Tai, Bruce L||Zhang, Lihui||Wang, Anthony C||Sullivan, Stephen||Wang, Guangjun||Shih, Albert J

publication date

  • January 2013