Hand exoskeleton for rehabilitation therapies with integrated optical force sensor

This article presents the design of a hand exoskeleton that features its modularity and the possibility of integrating a force sensor in its frame. The modularity is achieved by dividing the exoskeleton in separate units, each one driving a finger or pair of them. These units or “finger modules” hav...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advances in mechanical engineering 2018-02, Vol.10 (2)
Hauptverfasser: Díez, Jorge A, Blanco, Andrea, Catalán, José María, Badesa, Francisco J, Lledó, Luis Daniel, García-Aracil, Nicolas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article presents the design of a hand exoskeleton that features its modularity and the possibility of integrating a force sensor in its frame. The modularity is achieved by dividing the exoskeleton in separate units, each one driving a finger or pair of them. These units or “finger modules” have a single degree of freedom and may be easily attached or removed from the robot frame and human fingers by snap-in fixations. As for the force sensing capability, the device relies on a novel force sensor that uses optical elements to amplify and measure small elastic deformations in the robot structure. This sensor can be fully integrated as a structural element of the finger module. The proposed technology has been validated in two experimental sessions. A first study was performed in a clinical environment in order to check whether the hand exoskeleton (without the integrated force sensor) can successfully move an impaired hand in a “Mirror Therapy” environment. A second study was carried with healthy subjects to check the technical feasibility of using the integrated force sensor as a human–machine interface.
ISSN:1687-8132
1687-8140
DOI:10.1177/1687814017753881