Thursday, July 5, 2007

Bionic Arm Uses Elephant's Trunk as Design Model

Filed under: Prosthetics

Hung like an elephant's...arm. That's right, German engineers are taking a page from mother nature and modeling their new bionic arm after the anatomy of an elephant's trunk.

It is long, gray, soft and - endowed with no fewer than 40,000 muscles - extremely agile. An elephant uses its trunk to grasp objects and for drinking. With their trunks, the pachyderms can tear down trees and pull heavy loads, and yet are also capable of performing extremely delicate manipulations. Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA in Stuttgart have used the elephant's trunk as a design model. "Its suppleness and agility gave us the idea for a bionic robot arm, ISELLA," recounts Harald Staab, the IPA researcher who invented and developed the technology.

Robot arms often present a risk to human operators - a technical hitch can provoke wild, uncontrolled movements. Not so ISELLA. Whereas conventional robot arms have only one motor to drive each articulated joint, ISELLA has two, grouped in pairs so that if one motor control should fail, the second takes over to prevent uncontrolled movements. "Unlike pneumatic or hydraulic actuation systems, our robot arm has a simple, low-cost muscle, consisting of a small electric motor with a drive shaft and a cord," explains Staab. In the same way as a tendon attaches one muscle to another, the cord links two related moving parts. The drive shaft is attached to the midpoint of the cord. When the shaft turns, the cord wraps around it in both directions, forming a kind of double helix. The researchers have dubbed this DOHELIX. "The shaft is no thicker than the cord, but is strong enough to resist breaking. Consequently, it has a higher transmission ratio than a conventional geared motor," Staab explains. This has been achieved using elastic materials with a very high tear strength - the type of material used to manufacture yacht sails and hang gliders. As a result, DOHELIX is much cheaper and more energy-efficient than a system of gears. Its tensile force is many orders of magnitude greater than its own weight, and drive systems based on the DOHELIX concept can be used in applications on all scales - from micrometer-scale muscles to cranes in container seaports.

The ISELLA robot arm consists of a total of ten DOHELIX muscles, providing a flexor and an extensor for each articulated joint, four situated in the elbow and six in the upper arm. The robot arm is as flexible as a human arm. "At present we are working on the elbow," relates Staab. Possible applications for ISELLA include medical rehabilitation, for instance in therapy to restore the use of injured limbs, and low-cost, flexible prosthetic devices. Such devices could be commercially available within about two years, Staab estimates.

Watch out Dean Kamen, it looks like you might have some serious competition finally...

Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft Institute...

(hat tip: Gizmag)

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replies: 3 comments
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i think these new arms are really cool


Posted by: hey
on February 20, 2008 04:23 PM GMT

Am an ampute my self, i think this arm is revolutunary. Ow where can i get one.


Posted by: Mike Aragon
on May 16, 2008 06:37 PM GMT

I love this concept. So many people I've talked to on the subject of Bionic Arms and have replied with exclamations such as "I'd love an arm that had super strength, and a machine gun, and could rotate at a 100 mph!" you know: people with an inferiority complex trying to compensate for something.

What is brilliant about this arm is how liken it is to a human flesh and bone arm. I can understand a want for endurance though. Say you have one of these arms. you're walking down the street and suddenly your puled aside into an ally-way by a mugger - aiming for your chest with a knife you step to the side and they catch your bionic arm. slicing through both DOHELIX cords, what then? is it useless? You have to get it replaced? Will you survive to get it replaced, or can you fight off the criminal with one arm? Perhaps an outer shell of some kind - like stronger metal sheets that protect the cords - rather than a weak latex layer instituted in the frail hope of looking "realistic".

Other than that - a miracle of science. I am astounded! Excellent work.


Posted by: Matthew
on July 29, 2008 02:32 PM GMT

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