More Efficient Walking via Temporal and Spatial Energy Transfer in a Passive Biarticular Exosuit

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More Efficient Walking via Temporal and Spatial Energy Transfer in a Passive Biarticular Exosuit

Authors

Firouzi, V.; Ahmadi, A.; Davoodi, A.; Haufe, D.; Seyfarth, A.; Sawicki, G. S.; Sharbafi, M. A.

Abstract

Evaluating bioinspired design principles in wearable assistive devices provides a unique opportunity to interrogate our understanding of the critical factors that enable agile, stable, and economical human movement. We introduce the BiArticular Thigh EXosuit (BATEX), a wearable device integrating two morphological features found in biological legged systems: biarticular muscles and elastic tissues. BATEX employs two biarticular springs spanning the hip and knee to emulate the human rectus femoris and hamstring muscles, creating beneficial synergy to enhance walking economy. This design enables two energy-shuffling mechanisms: temporal (spring-like storage/return at a joint) and spatial (strut-like transfer across joints). In walking experiments at 1.3 m/s with N = 9 participants, a single compliant biarticular spring yielded a 7% metabolic cost reduction compared to walking without BATEX. Individually optimized configurations further improved metabolic reduction to 9%. BATEX morphology allowed users not only to off-load biological joint power (Assist) but also to increase total power (Augment). Across all exosuit configurations, the mechanical impact of the exosuit was reflected by a significant correlation between changes in users' biarticular muscles' activity and changes in net metabolic rate. In sum, compliant-biarticular exosuit architectures can concurrently assist and augment human lower-limb joint function, providing significant metabolic savings during walking.

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