In the world of soft-robotic medical devices, there is a growing need for low profile, non-rigid, and lower power actuators for soft exoskeletons and dynamic compression garments. Advanced compression garments with integrated shape memory materials have been developed recently to alleviate the functional and usability limitations associated with traditional compression garments. These advanced garments use contractile shape memory alloy (SMA) coil actuators to produce dynamic compression on the body through selective heating of the SMA material. While these garments can create spatially- and temporally-controllable compression, typical SMA materials (e.g., 70°C Flexinol) consume considerable power and require considerable thermal insulation to protect the wearer during the heating phase of the SMA actuation. Alternative SMA materials (e.g., NiTi #8 by Fort Wayne Metals, Inc.) transform below room temperature and do so using no applied electrical power and generate no waste heat. However, these materials are challenging to dynamically control and require active refrigeration to reset to material. In theory, low-temperature SMA actuators made from materials like NiTi #8 may maintain additional dynamic actuation capacity once equilibrated to room temperature (i.e., the material may not fully transform), as the SMA phase transformation temperature window expands when the material experiences applied stress. This paper investigates this possibility: we manufactured and tested low-temperature NiTi coil actuators to determine the magnitude of the additional force that can be generated via Joule heating once the material has equilibrated to room temperature. SMA spring actuators made from NiTi #8 consumed 84% less power and stabilized at significantly lower temperatures (26.0°C vs. 41.2°C) than SMA springs made from 70°C Flexinol, when actuated at identically fixed displacements (100% nominal strain) and when driven to produce equal forces (∼3.35N). This demonstration of low-power, minimal-heat exposure SMA actuation holds promise for many future wearable actuation applications, including dynamic compression garments.
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2019 Design of Medical Devices Conference
April 15–18, 2019
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
ISBN:
978-0-7918-4103-7
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Low-Power, Minimal-Heat Exposure Shape Memory Alloy (SMA) Actuators for On-Body Soft Robotics
Simon Ozbek,
Simon Ozbek
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
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Esther Foo,
Esther Foo
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
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J. Walter Lee,
J. Walter Lee
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
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Nicholas Schleif,
Nicholas Schleif
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
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Brad Holschuh
Brad Holschuh
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
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Simon Ozbek
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
Esther Foo
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
J. Walter Lee
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
Nicholas Schleif
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
Brad Holschuh
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
Paper No:
DMD2019-3287, V001T09A014; 5 pages
Published Online:
July 19, 2019
Citation
Ozbek, S, Foo, E, Lee, JW, Schleif, N, & Holschuh, B. "Low-Power, Minimal-Heat Exposure Shape Memory Alloy (SMA) Actuators for On-Body Soft Robotics." Proceedings of the 2019 Design of Medical Devices Conference. 2019 Design of Medical Devices Conference. Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. April 15–18, 2019. V001T09A014. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/DMD2019-3287
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