Implications of Spatially Constrained Bipennate Topology on Fluidic Artificial Muscle Bundle Actuation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. System Formulation
2.1. Muscle Topologies
2.2. Design Case and Fiber Boundary Conditions
- The ‘pinned boundary condition’, illustrated in Figure 2a, defines that one end of each fiber is pinned to the rigid frame, while the other end is pinned to a central spine. Because the pin joints are fixed to rigid bodies, an initial clearance must be provided between the fibers, such that the fibers do not interfere with one another during contraction and the resulting radial expansion. We consider the case where this clearance is set, such that the fibers contact one another at exactly one contraction condition, and never interfere over the full stroke of the muscle.
- The ‘fiber contact boundary condition’ defines that contact between fibers is maintained during actuation. Fibers are assumed to remain cylindrical and are constrained to remain in frictionless, tangential contact, such that they can freely slide relative to one another, but cannot be separated. Physically, this could be implemented by pinning one end of the outer or top-most pair of fibers to a rigid external frame, while the remaining fiber ends on the rigid frame can slide freely. The opposite ends of the fibers are connected to their respective symmetric counterparts to complete the bipennate arrangement. Figure 2b illustrates a visual representation of fibers under this boundary condition. This fiber contact boundary condition represents an idealization of the function of the connective tissue in biological muscles that surrounds individual muscle fibers and enables fibers to slide relative to one another, while holding the fibers together transversally. This connective tissue, or endomysium, is deformable to adapt to volumetric changes during muscle fiber contraction, and has been shown to have a limited role in transmitting muscular force [18]. This fiber contact boundary condition thus serves as a direct analogy to biological muscle physiology.
2.3. Muscle Bundle Parameterization
3. Effects of Pennation Angle on Bundle Actuator Performance
3.1. Muscle Force-Strain Behavior
3.2. Peak Muscle Displacement
3.3. Muscle Blocked Force
3.4. Muscle Stiffness
3.5. Isobaric Work Output
3.6. Isotonic Work Output
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Parameter | Variable | Value |
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Initial braid angle | ||
Bounding length | ||
Bounding width | ||
Bounding depth |
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Duan, E.; Bryant, M. Implications of Spatially Constrained Bipennate Topology on Fluidic Artificial Muscle Bundle Actuation. Actuators 2022, 11, 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/act11030082
Duan E, Bryant M. Implications of Spatially Constrained Bipennate Topology on Fluidic Artificial Muscle Bundle Actuation. Actuators. 2022; 11(3):82. https://doi.org/10.3390/act11030082
Chicago/Turabian StyleDuan, Emily, and Matthew Bryant. 2022. "Implications of Spatially Constrained Bipennate Topology on Fluidic Artificial Muscle Bundle Actuation" Actuators 11, no. 3: 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/act11030082
APA StyleDuan, E., & Bryant, M. (2022). Implications of Spatially Constrained Bipennate Topology on Fluidic Artificial Muscle Bundle Actuation. Actuators, 11(3), 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/act11030082