Affiliation:
1. Department of Electrical Engineering College Ahuntsic Montreal Quebec Canada
2. Department of Mechanical Engineering University of Wisconsin‐Milwaukee Milwaukee WI USA
3. Department of Electrical Engineering École de Technologie Supérieure Montreal Quebec Canada
Abstract
AbstractThis study addresses two issues about the interaction of the upper limb rehabilitation robot with individuals who have disabilities. The first step is to estimate the human's target position (also known as TPH). The second step is to develop a robust adaptive impedance control mechanism. A novel Non‐singular Terminal Sliding Mode Control combined with an adaptive super‐twisting controller is being developed to achieve this goal. This combination's purpose is to provide high reliability, continuous performance tracking of the system's trajectories. The proposed adaptive control strategy reduces matched dynamic uncertainty while also lowering chattering, which is the sliding mode's most glaring issue. The proposed TPH is coupled with adaptive impedance control with the use of a Radial Basis Function Neural Network, which allows a robotic exoskeleton to simply track the desired impedance model. To validate the approach in real‐time, an exoskeleton robot was deployed in controlled experimental circumstances. A comparison study has been set up to show how the adaptive impedance approach proposed is better than other traditional controllers.
Publisher
Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET)
Subject
Artificial Intelligence,Computational Theory and Mathematics,Computer Networks and Communications,Hardware and Architecture,Human-Computer Interaction,Information Systems
Cited by
5 articles.
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