Enhancing Prosthetic Control through High‐Fidelity Myoelectric Mapping with Molecular Anchoring Technology

Author:

Pan Liang12,Wang Hui3,Huang Pingao4,Wu Xuwei5,Tang Zihan5,Jiang Ying2,Ji Shaobo2,Cao Jinwei2,Ji Baohua56,Li Guanglin3,Li Dechang5,Wang Zhiming1,Chen Xiaodong27ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Fundamental and Frontier Sciences University of Electronic Science and Technology of China Chengdu 610054 P. R. China

2. Innovative Centre for Flexible Devices (iFLEX) Max Planck−NTU Joint Lab for Artificial Senses School of Materials Science and Engineering Nanyang Technological University 50 Nanyang Avenue Singapore 639798 Singapore

3. CAS Key Laboratory of Human‐Machine Intelligence‐Synergy Systems Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology (SIAT) Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Shenzhen 518055 P. R. China

4. School of Electronic Engineering and Automation Guilin University of Electronic Technology Guilin Guangxi 541004 P. R. China

5. Key Laboratory of Soft Machines and Smart Devices of Zhejiang Province Department of Engineering Mechanics Zhejiang University Hangzhou 310027 P. R. China

6. Oujiang Laboratory Wenzhou Institute University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Wenzhou 325001 P. R. China

7. Institute of Materials Research and Engineering Agency for Science Technology and Research 2 Fusionopolis Way, Innovis, #08‐03 Singapore 138634 Singapore

Abstract

AbstractMyoelectric control utilizes electrical signals generated from the voluntary contraction of remaining muscles in an amputee's stump to operate a prosthesis. Precise and agile control requires low‐level myoelectric signals (below 10% of maximum voluntary contraction, MVC) from weak muscle contractions such as phantom finger or wrist movements, but imbalanced calcium concentration in atrophic skin can distort the signals. This is due to poor ionic–electronic coupling between skin and electrode, which often causes excessive muscle contraction, fatigue, and discomfort during delicate tasks. To overcome this challenge, a new strategy called molecular anchoring is developed to drive hydrophobic molecular effectively interact with and embed into stratum corneum for high coupling regions between ionic fluxes and electronic currents. The use of hydrophobic poly(N‐vinyl caprolactam) gel has resulted in an interface impedance of 20 kΩ, which is 1/100 of a commercial acrylic‐based electrode, allowing the detection of ultralow myoelectric signals (≈1.5% MVC) that approach human limits. With this molecular anchoring technology, amputees operate a prosthesis with greater dexterity, as phantom finger and wrist movements are predicted with 97.6% accuracy. This strategy provides the potential for a comfortable human–machine interface when amputees accomplish day‐to‐day tasks through precise and dexterous myoelectric control.

Funder

Agency for Science, Technology and Research

National Research Foundation Singapore

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Higher Education Discipline Innovation Project

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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