Lower-limb exoskeleton robots play a pivotal role in rehabilitation medicine and assistive augmentation, where precise dynamic modelling and trajectory tracking control are fundamental to effective assistance. Existing models predominantly focus on hip and knee rotational degrees of freedom, with insufficient attention to ankle dynamics and pelvic translation. To address these limitations, this paper establishes a sagittal-plane dynamic model comprising nine generalised coordinates, treating the human lower limb and exoskeleton as an integrated coupled system. A seven-segment kinematic model encompassing the trunk, bilateral thighs, shanks, and feet is constructed via a modified Denavit–Hartenberg parameter method, and dynamic equations are derived using Lagrangian formulation. Three control strategies—PD control, PD with gravity compensation, and the computed torque method—are designed and evaluated through simulations using gait data from five subjects (two self-collected, three from a public dataset) acquired via Vicon motion capture. Results demonstrate that the computed torque method achieves a joint angle tracking root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.59°, representing an 86.3% improvement over conventional PD control, while maintaining a low control torque RMS of 4.44 N·m. The controller exhibits stable tracking performance across walking speeds of 0.4–1.45 m/s, validating the effectiveness of the proposed model and control strategies.
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Huanrong Xiao
Xinjiang University
Teng Ran
Afang Jin
Xinjiang University
Sensors
Xinjiang University
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Xiao et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ccb76c16edfba7beb89605 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/s26072124