A Semi-Powered Ankle Prosthesis and Unified Controller for Level and Sloped Walking
H Bartlett, Shane T. King, Michael Goldfarb, Brian E. Lawson
Abstract
This paper describes a semi-powered ankle prosthesis and corresponding unified controller that provides biomimetic behavior for level and sloped walking without requiring identification of ground slope or modulation of control parameters. The controller is based on the observation that healthy individuals maintain an invariant external quasi-stiffness (spring like behavior between the shank and ground) when walking on level and sloped terrain. Emulating an invariant external quasi-stiffness requires an ankle that can vary the set-point (i.e., equilibrium angle) of the ankle stiffness. A semi-powered ankle prosthesis that incorporates a novel constant-volume power-asymmetric actuator was developed to provide this behavior, and the unified controller was implemented on it. The device and unified controller were assessed on three subjects with transtibial amputations while walking on inclines, level ground, and declines. Experimental results suggest that the prosthesis and accompanying controller can provide a consistent external quasi-stiffness similar to healthy subjects across all tested ground slopes.