A portable and spring-guided hand exoskeleton for exercising flexion/extension of the fingers

•A portable and spring-guided CPM device for the hand is proposed.•General finger motions were obtained through the finger flexion/extension experiment by four subjects.•The design of the linkage structure was optimized based on the users hand size for general finger motions.•A spring attached to th...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inMechanism and machine theory Vol. 135; pp. 176 - 191
Main Authors Jo, Inseong, Park, Yeongyu, Lee, Jeongsoo, Bae, Joonbum
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.05.2019
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ISSN0094-114X
1873-3999
DOI10.1016/j.mechmachtheory.2019.02.004

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Summary:•A portable and spring-guided CPM device for the hand is proposed.•General finger motions were obtained through the finger flexion/extension experiment by four subjects.•The design of the linkage structure was optimized based on the users hand size for general finger motions.•A spring attached to the structure generates the forces to guide the fingers toward the desired posture.•Performance of the system was verified by simulation and experimented in terms of finger motions and force distribution by the spring. In this paper, we developed a portable and spring-guided hand exoskeleton system for exercising flexion/extension of the fingers. The exoskeleton was designed with a simple structure to aid finger motion with one degree of freedom (DOF). The desired joint trajectory of the exoskeleton was determined based on the user joint ROM and general finger motion obtained by the hand flexion/extension experiments. The design of the linkage structure was optimized to maximally satisfy the desired trajectory. A spring attached to the structure generates the force to guide the fingers toward the desired posture when they deviate from the desired position. We used a finite element method (FEM) to analyze the transmitted moments for MCP and PIP joints. A prototype of the device was fabricated, and the performance of the system was experimentally verified. The experimental results of the finger motion indicated that the proposed system provided good guidance for flexion/extension of the fingers. Furthermore, the results of the force distribution experiment verified that the joint moments by the system are matched to the expected moments by FEM analysis. Thus, the CPM device successfully guided the users fingers along the desired trajectory and distributed the expected moments to the joints.
ISSN:0094-114X
1873-3999
DOI:10.1016/j.mechmachtheory.2019.02.004