The present disclosure provides systems and methods for converting rotational motion into radial motion. A free base motor, i.e., a motor having two rotors that are free to rotate instead of a fixed stator and a single rotatable rotor (dual-rotor statorless motor), can convert the relative rotation of the rotors into radial motion of arms that are attached to the rotors under certain constraints. Such a free base motor has applications in a wide variety of fields.
The subject matter described below refers to the accompanying drawings, of which:
FIGS. 11A-B show alternative orientations of whole-arm interfaces with respect to a subject.
FIGS. 12A-E depict an embodiment of a controllable advancement device in various stages of advancement.
When rotors 10, 20 rotate in opposite directions, the arms so pivot as to push pieces 50a, 50b in or out. If the arms of a given assembly have the same length and their proximal ends (coupled at joints 25a, 35a) are positioned at equal distances from the rotors' axis of rotation, then the piece 50 will move radially, i.e., it will move toward or away from the rotors' axis and rotate about that axis.
The motion generator can be disposed in a variety of positions relative to the rotors. For example, if the rotors are annular or toroidal, the motion generator may be located in space inside the rotors. The motion generator can also be disposed at a position distant from the rotors and connected to the rotors by one or more transmissive elements. For example, the motion generator can be connected to the rotor arm assemblies by a cable drive.
Also included in the illustrated embodiment of
In the apparatus depicted in
In the embodiment of
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The “throw” of a device (i.e., the change in size between the furthest contraction to the furthest expansion) depends on several factors, including the arm lengths, overall size of the device, mechanical advantage, torque and desired contour. The throw desired depends on the intended use of the device. For example, a device being used to deploy panels on a space satellite might have a throw of 1-5 meters, a device being used to train or exercise a human subject's hand might have a throw of a few centimeters, a device being used in a subject's intestine might have a throw of a few millimeters, and a device being used in a subject's blood vessel might have a throw of a few tenths of a millimeter. Larger and smaller throws than these are contemplated.
The lengths and/or positioning of the arms in the arm assemblies supporting the panels that define the contour may be so sized to cause the apparatus to maintain the approximate shape of the contour during expansion or to cause the contour shape to change during expansion. For example, if a device has an elliptical contour that is to be maintained during expansion, the arms of an arm assembly supporting a panel that opens along the ellipse's major axis may be proportionately longer than the arms of an arm assembly supporting a panel that opens along the ellipse's minor axis. The arms' positioning can be varied to control how the respective panel will move during expansion and contraction. For example, the proximal ends of arms coupled to one panel may be positioned apart from one another on a rotor at a distance different from that of another set of arms coupled to another panel, so that a given amount of counter-rotation results in different amounts of radial motion for the two panels.
While not required, some embodiments may include a shell 505 made of rubber or other pliable material. The shell 505 covers all or part of the outer surface of the panels and may also cover the space between the panels when the device is open or partially open. The shell may increase the surface area and/or friction between the hand and the panel 235, and thereby enhances a subject's ability to grip the hand interface 100. The shell 505 also may provide added comfort to the subject by increasing the cushioning on the panel 235. Moreover, the shell 505 may reduce the build up of perspiration in the hand. As a result, this enhances the patient's safety and comfort, as well as his or her ability to grasp the hand interface 100. By covering space between panels, the shell can also prevent entrapment of debris or other objects between the panels as they close (for example, pinching a fold of a subject's skin).
Some embodiments may also include a strap or other restraint, such as strap 701 shown in
As illustrated in FIGS. 6A-B, the free base motor device also may include a mechanism for creating torque and displacement offset, by which the total torque delivered by the device upon the structure surrounding the device, if any, is passively increased. The offset mechanism may include, for example, torsion spring 605 which adds a bias torque source to the one being provided by the motion generator. In the embodiment shown in
One reason to include the offset mechanism is to counter a baseline compressive force exerted on the device by a structure surrounding the device. For example, if the device is incorporated into a hand interface that is being used to exercise and/or rehabilitate the hypertonic grip of a stroke victim, the subject may involuntarily grasp the interface with a compressive force that overwhelms the radial force of the panels or at least requires the motion generator to work at or near capacity just to counter the grip strength. The offset mechanism can provide the device with a parallel torque that compensates for the subject's hypertonia and biases the devices to an open position.
A device may also include a controller, such as a computer or other computational circuit, that can control the positions of the rotors (i.e., move the rotors to transition the device to a fully open, partly open, or closed position), set the torque to be generated by the motor, monitor the rotation state(s) of the rotor(s) positions, and/or monitor external forces exerted on a device. The controller can facilitate executing preselected rotor movement patterns (for example, by sending commands or signals in accordance with a sequence stored in controller or external memory to the motion generator) and/or receiving sensor data from the device.
The examples given here illustrate specific embodiments of hand interfaces in order to show with some particularity how a hand interface can be constructed and used. As one familiar with the biomechanical arts will appreciate, a wide variety of options exist in the choice of actuators, sensors, transmissions, materials, etc. that do not bear directly on the inventive aspects of the present disclosure.
As described above, a free base motor device can be incorporated into a hand interface. The hand interface can be used to provide therapy, assess a patient's neurological and/or musculoskeletal status, train a subject to make selected hand movements, develop a subject's hand strength, and/or measure hand movements.
In this particular embodiment, the rotors can rotate through 180 degrees with respect to one another, resulting in an open diameter of about 80 millimeters and a closed diameter of about 40 millimeters.
The device may be covered by a rubber cylinder (not shown) in order to conform to the grip shape. As the panels expand, they stretch the rubber cylinder and open the subject's hand.
The length of the panels may be selected to fit the space in which the device is to be used. For example, the panels should be at least about as long as the span of a user's hand if the device is being used to train or exercise all of the hand's fingers.
The hand interface may be connected to a controller as described previously. The controller can be used to provide assistance or resistance to a subject's motion. For example, the controller can cause the device to resist a subject's attempt to close the hand by instructing the motor to generate a torque that will tend to open the device. The controller can cause the device to assist a subject's attempt to open the hand in the same manner. The controller can record the time history of position, velocity, command torques, and current information (motor torques) as games or other training sessions progress.
The hand interface can use impedance control to guide a subject gently through desired movements. If a patient is incapable of movement, the controller can produce a high impedance (high stiffness) between the desired position and the patient position to move the patient through a given motion. When the user begins to recover, this impedance can gradually be lowered to allow the patient to create his or her own movements.
Hand interfaces also can be made mechanically backdrivable. That is, when an attachment is used in a passive mode (i.e. no input power from the actuators), the impedance due to the mechanical hardware (the effective friction and inertia that the user feels when moving) is small enough that the user can easily push the robot around. Using force or torque feedback, the mechanical impedance can be further reduced.
The hand interface may be combined with a shoulder/elbow motion device to form a hand-shoulder-elbow interface. Such a device may be used to provide therapy, training, and/or measurement of hand, shoulder, and elbow movements. Such combined therapy may have significant advantages over therapy devices for only one joint, because a combined therapy device will be more effective in recapitulating the complex and coordinated upper extremity movements of normal activity.
The shoulder/elbow motion device may also include a shoulder motor coupled to one of the joints and controlling motion of the shoulder joint. The shoulder/elbow motion device may further include an elbow motor coupled to one of the joints and controlling motion of the elbow actuation joint. The motors may be located at shoulder joint 835. Locating the motors far from the end point can reduce inertia and friction of the device. In some embodiments, the motors may be aligned along a vertical axis so that the effects of their weight and that of the mechanism is eliminated.
Hand interface 700 may be attached to the distal free end of forearm member 810 by a mount 850. The mount may provide one degree of freedom for rotation about the mount axis.
The embodiment of
Similarly, the hand interface may be combined with a wrist motion device to form a hand-wrist attachment.
In yet another alternative, the hand interface may be combined with both the shoulder/elbow motion device and the wrist motion device to form a whole arm attachment. This combined system can coordinated therapy for the hand, wrist, elbow and shoulder. Such a system may be particularly useful for helping a subject learn complex motions of the upper extremity, evenly develop strength in muscle groups, and measure a wide variety of parameters that describe arm movements.
A computer can be programmed to administer “games” to exercise or train various wrist and upper extremity motions. The computer program may instruct the hand interface to exert assistive or resistive torques to help or to challenge the subject, as appropriate.
Hand-wrist, hand-shoulder-elbow, and whole arm attachments can be used in a wide variety of applications. Two broad categories of uses are actuating and sensing. In actuating modes, the devices impart torques or forces on a user's hand, wrist or upper extremity. These torques can be assistive (that is, helping a user move the hand, wrist or upper extremity in the way the user wishes or is directed), or they can be resistive (that is, making it harder for a user to move the hand, wrist or upper extremity in the way the user wishes or is directed) or they can perturb the limb in a precisely controllable manner. Actuating modes are particularly well-suited for rehabilitation and training applications, in which a user is attempting to develop accuracy and/or strength in a particular hand, wrist, shoulder-and-elbow or whole-arm motion. In sensing modes, the devices measure position and/or velocity of the device (and thus of the user), and/or torques exerted by the user on the device. Sensing modes are well-suited for diagnostic, investigational, and training applications, in which a user's performance is being assessed or hand movements are being compared to other measurements. In many circumstances, a device may operate in both actuating and sensing modes. For example, in a training application, the device controller may direct a user to make a certain motion, monitor the user's ability to make the motion, and cause the device to provide assistive or resistive or perturbation forces in response to the user's voluntary motions.
Presently the neurorehabilitation process is a very labor intensive process. A single patient requires several hours with an occupational or physical therapist on a daily basis to regain motor skill. The estimated annual direct cost for the care of stroke victims is $30 billion. The various devices disclosed herein may be used to help aid the recovery of patients with neurological disorders, muscular disorders, neuromuscular disorders, arthritis (or other debilitating diseases) or with hand impairment following surgery. In addition to helping patients recover, the devices can be used to collect data on patient movement in a given therapeutic session and over several sessions. This data can help therapists quantify patient improvement and/or identify patient problem areas.
Presently, angioplasty requires the insertion of a balloon at the end of the catheter. The balloon is inflated at the blockage point to clear the arteries. Thus, the present device can replace the balloon and be threaded via a catheter into an artery in a leg, an arm or a wrist of a subject. Once the catheter is threaded through the artery and into the subject's heart, the motion generator may be actuated to cause the device to expand into an open position. This motion recapitulates the compressive effect of the balloon and can clear the blockage in the coronary arteries.
In order to facilitate the making of a small-sized device, the motion generator may be located at a distance from the rotor-arm system. For example, the motion generator may be connected to the rotor-arm system by a cable drive, so that the motion generator is outside the subject's body, and the counter-rotation torques are transmitted to the rotors by coaxial cables extending through the catheter.
During an upper endoscopic procedure, a long, flexible tube is inserted via the mouth of the patient. The flexible tube is threaded to the patient's esophagus, stomach, small intestine, or biliary tree, where the physician may examine the area more closely. The free base mechanism device may be attached to one end of the flexible tube, and its panels expanded against the walls of the esophagus, the stomach or the small intestine. The device provides the physician with a larger opening to perform a minimum invasive surgery to open and clean an obstruction.
During a lower endoscopic procedure, a long, flexible tube is inserted via the rectum of the patient. The flexible tube is threaded to the patient's colon where the physician may examine the area more closely. The present device may be attached to one end of the flexible tube and its panels expanded against the walls of the colon. Similarly, the device provides the physician with a larger opening to perform the procedure, e.g. colonoscopy.
The motion generator may be remotely located by using a cable drive, as described previously.
Endoscopic devices may include a camera, fiber optics, or other imaging systems for visualizing the gastrointestinal tract. Devices for visualization of other body cavities or lumens, such as by angiography or cystoscopy may be similarly made.
The various devices disclosed herein may be used to map hand activity to brain activity. The robot's computer accurately records the position, velocity and acceleration of the hand. Using a technology capable of monitoring or imaging the brain, such as EEG (electro-encephalography), PET (positron emission tomography), or fMRI, or NIRS (Near Infrared Spectroscopy), the relationships between hand motions and brain activity can be mapped.
The various devices could be used to describe the orientation of a robot end-effector and could also be used to transmit torques sensed by the robot back to the operator. They could be used to control small manipulators for tele-surgery robots or in robots for dangerous environments (such as space tele-robots), or to control other devices, such as airplanes, automobiles, underwater vehicles, and the like. In some embodiments, the device may be a haptic interface.
Free base motor devices can be used to provide fine control of the motion of an object, as shown in FIGS. 12A-E. Two free base motor devices can be mounted on an object (such as a camera assembly) spaced apart from one another. By alternating opening and closing of the free base motor devices, the object can be made to creep or “inch” along a conduit (such as a pipe, gastrointestinal tract, blood vessel, or other hollow body organ). In the depicted schematic embodiment, a rear free base motor is mounted on a retractable shaft, and a front free base motor device is mounted on a more forward position of the object. To advance the object, the rear device is closed, the shaft is drawn into the object, the rear device is opened, the front device is closed, and the shaft is extended. The object can be moved backward by reversing the process. Such motion control can reduce or eliminate the shear force to which the conduit being “crawled” is subjected.
Free base motor devices can be used as a variable transmission or propulsion by changing the diameter of for example the vehicle wheels, a crank, a continuously variable transmission system (CVT), or the sprockets driving a belt or chain.
Free base motor devices can be used in the propulsion system by changing the diameter of, for example, the radius of rotation of a Voith-Schneider propeller.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/729,906, filed Oct. 25, 2005, which is hereby incorporated herein by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60729906 | Oct 2005 | US |