Complex Stiffness Model of Physical Human-Robot Interaction: Implications for Control of Performance Augmentation Exoskeletons Institutional Repository Document uri icon

abstract

  • Human joint dynamic stiffness plays an important role in the stability of performance augmentation exoskeletons. In this paper, we consider a new frequency domain model of the human joint dynamics which features a complex value stiffness. This complex stiffness consists of a real stiffness and a hysteretic damping. We use it to explain the dynamic behaviors of the human connected to the exoskeleton, in particular the observed non-zero low frequency phase shift and the near constant damping ratio of the resonant as stiffness and inertia vary. We validate this concept by experimenting with an elbow-joint exoskeleton testbed on a subject while modifying joint stiffness behavior, exoskeleton inertia, and strength augmentation gains. We compare three different models of elbow-joint dynamic stiffness: a model with real stiffness, viscous damping and inertia, a model with complex stiffness and inertia, and a model combining the previous two models. Our results show that the hysteretic damping term improves modeling accuracy, using a statistical F-test. Moreover this improvement is statistically more significant than using classical viscous damping term. In addition, we experimentally observe a linear relationship between the hysteretic damping and the real part of the stiffness which allows us to simplify the complex stiffness model as a 1-parameter system. Ultimately, we design a fractional order controller to demonstrate how human hysteretic damping behavior can be exploited to improve strength amplification performance while maintaining stability.

author list (cited authors)

  • He, B., Huang, H., Thomas, G. C., & Sentis, L.

citation count

  • 0

complete list of authors

  • He, Binghan||Huang, Huang||Thomas, Gray C||Sentis, Luis

Book Title

  • arXiv

publication date

  • March 2019