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1.
Front Robot AI ; 9: 768841, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35368436

RESUMO

Wearable robotic devices are designed to assist, enhance or restore human muscle performance. Understanding how a wearable robotic device changes human biomechanics through complex interaction is important to guide its proper design, parametric optimization and functional success. The present work develops a human-machine-interaction simulation platform for closed loop dynamic analysis with feedback control and to study the effect of soft-robotic wearables on human physiology. The proposed simulation platform incorporates Computed Muscle Control (CMC) algorithm and is implemented using the MATLAB -OpenSim interface. The framework is generic and will allow incorporation of any advanced control strategy for the wearable devices. As a demonstration, a Gravity Compensation (GC) controller has been implemented on the wearable device and the resulting decrease in the joint moments, muscle activations and metabolic costs during a simple repetitive load lifting task with two different speeds is investigated.

2.
Heliyon ; 2(10): e00164, 2016 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27861644

RESUMO

A unified thermodynamic framework for the characterization of functional materials is developed. This framework encompasses linear reversible and irreversible processes with thermal, electrical, magnetic, and/or mechanical effects coupled. The comprehensive framework combines the principles of classical equilibrium and non-equilibrium thermodynamics with electrodynamics of continua in the infinitesimal strain regime. In the first part of this paper, linear Thermo-Electro-Magneto-Mechanical (TEMM) quasistatic processes are characterized. Thermodynamic stability conditions are further imposed on the linear constitutive model and restrictions on the corresponding material constants are derived. The framework is then extended to irreversible transport phenomena including thermoelectric, thermomagnetic and the state-of-the-art spintronic and spin caloritronic effects. Using Onsager's reciprocity relationships and the dissipation inequality, restrictions on the kinetic coefficients corresponding to charge, heat and spin transport processes are derived. All the constitutive models are accompanied by multiphysics interaction diagrams that highlight the various processes that can be characterized using this framework.

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