Despite recent advances in wearable technology, interfacing movement
assistance devices with the human body remains challenging. We present a
stretchable pneumatic sleeve that can anchor an exosuit actuator to the human
arm with a low displacement of the actuator's mounting point relative to the
body during operation. Our sleeve has the potential to serve as an adaptable
attachment mechanism for exosuits, since it can adjust its pressure to only
compress the arm as much as needed to transmit the applied exosuit forces
without a large displacement. We discuss the design of our sleeve, which is
made of fabric pneumatic artificial muscle (fPAM) actuators formed into bands.
We quantify the performance of nine fPAM bands of various lengths and widths,
as well as three sleeves (an fPAM sleeve, a series pouch motor (SPM) sleeve as
in previous literature, and an off the shelf hook and loop sleeve), through the
measurement of the compressing force as a function of pressure and the
localized pulling force that can be resisted as a function of both pressure and
mounting point displacement. Our experimental results show that fPAM bands with
smaller resting length and/or larger resting width produce higher forces. Also,
when inflated, an fPAM sleeve that has equivalent dimensions to the SPM sleeve
while fully stretched has similar performance to the SPM sleeve. While
inflated, both pneumatic sleeves decrease the mounting point displacement
compared to the hook and loop sleeve. Compared to the SPM sleeve, the fPAM
sleeve is able to hold larger internal pressure before bursting, increasing its
possible force range. Also, when not inflated, the fPAM sleeve resists the
pulling force well, indicating its ability to provide anchoring when not
actuated.Comment: 7th IEEE-RAS International Conference on Soft Robotics (RoboSoft
2024) Supplementary video: https://youtu.be/9orz3NzMXT4?si=ZCjG72tS_2rSeFh