TY - JOUR
T1 - Knee-Inspired Hinge Absorbs Longitudinal Impacts to Enhance Robot-Environment Interaction Safety
AU - Yang, Lianxin
AU - Li, Xinyan
AU - Zhao, Tianyu
AU - Zhao, Zhihua
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2004-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - As robots integrate into human society, ensuring safe robot-environment interaction, particularly in the event of collisions, has emerged as a growing design priority. A promising solution is introducing proper compliance into existing rigid robots, akin to musculoskeletal systems, to absorb impacts in various directions. However, mimicking longitudinal compliance seen in biological joints to absorb compressive impacts along limbs, such as the role of cartilages like menisci, remains a challenge shadowed by the complexity of joint architecture. Here, exploring and adapting the elastic longitudinal movement structure of knee, we incorporated traditional mechanical hinges with a compact buffer structure to enable both simple rotational motion and effective longitudinal impact absorption. Under longitudinal loading, the buffer structure functions as a mechanism transmitting the limited compression to amplified deformations of elastic elements, thus producing resistance against load. The resistive load-displacement relationship is tailorable by tuning diverse elastic components, allowing for a high-static-low-dynamic stiffness to improve energy absorption efficiency. Drop tests and walking robot demonstrations confirm that the proposed knee-inspired hinge not only mitigates acceleration transmitted to the robot’s main body but also reduces ground reaction forces, thereby improving robot-environment interaction safety. This work highlights the design paradigm of adapting natural solutions to mechanical systems, and holds potential for direct integration into diverse robots, exoskeletons, and prostheses.
AB - As robots integrate into human society, ensuring safe robot-environment interaction, particularly in the event of collisions, has emerged as a growing design priority. A promising solution is introducing proper compliance into existing rigid robots, akin to musculoskeletal systems, to absorb impacts in various directions. However, mimicking longitudinal compliance seen in biological joints to absorb compressive impacts along limbs, such as the role of cartilages like menisci, remains a challenge shadowed by the complexity of joint architecture. Here, exploring and adapting the elastic longitudinal movement structure of knee, we incorporated traditional mechanical hinges with a compact buffer structure to enable both simple rotational motion and effective longitudinal impact absorption. Under longitudinal loading, the buffer structure functions as a mechanism transmitting the limited compression to amplified deformations of elastic elements, thus producing resistance against load. The resistive load-displacement relationship is tailorable by tuning diverse elastic components, allowing for a high-static-low-dynamic stiffness to improve energy absorption efficiency. Drop tests and walking robot demonstrations confirm that the proposed knee-inspired hinge not only mitigates acceleration transmitted to the robot’s main body but also reduces ground reaction forces, thereby improving robot-environment interaction safety. This work highlights the design paradigm of adapting natural solutions to mechanical systems, and holds potential for direct integration into diverse robots, exoskeletons, and prostheses.
KW - Biomimetics
KW - compliant joint/mechanism
KW - impact absorption
KW - physical human–robot interaction
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105023052672
U2 - 10.1109/TRO.2025.3637130
DO - 10.1109/TRO.2025.3637130
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105023052672
SN - 1552-3098
VL - 42
SP - 115
EP - 131
JO - IEEE Transactions on Robotics
JF - IEEE Transactions on Robotics
ER -