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New "Arms" for Disabled Soldiers
Designing a better prosthetic arm for military amputees.

Jesse Sullivan, double amputee from Tennessee, tests new DARPA arm.
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Jesse Sullivan, a double amputee from Dayton, Tenn., has been called the
world's first "bionic man" with his thought-controlled, state-of-the-art prosthetic
arm. He can eat with a fork, pick up a cup, paint his house or guide a
weed eater by bending his advanced appendage's elbow and rotating its forearm.
But he still cannot grasp and throw a baseball, cast a fishing line, tie his shoes or
type on a computer keyboard as naturally as before. That may change with the
help of numerous organizations including Oak Ridge National Laboratory, some
50 miles north of Sullivan's hometown.
In 2001 while working as a utility lineman, Sullivan lost both
arms after a 7000-volt shock in a power-line accident. Physicians
at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago (RIC) reattached
nerves from Sullivan's amputated arm to his chest muscles,
which were connected electronically to the prosthetic arm. When
he thinks "close hand," electrical signals released as his chest
muscles contract are picked up by electrodes in the prosthesis. The
electrodes relay the signal to a computer chip that commands
his electronic hand to close. Northwestern University's Prosthetics
Research Laboratory developed this thought-controlled arm.
Sullivan is now testing an even more advanced prosthetic arm
that allows him to pull a credit card from his pocket and stack
cups by controlling grip force. This next-generation prototype was
designed and built by a team of multiple organizations through
funding from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA), the U.S. Department of Defense agency responsible for
development of new technology for use by the military.
DARPA has been funding two programs to create a fully functional
upper limb that responds directly to neural control. The
motivation for this demanding research project is the growing
number of American soldiers who have lost limbs while serving in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
The first DARPA program, Revolutionizing Prosthetics 2007,
is led by DEKA Research and Development Corp. The objective
of this two-year program has been to design and fabricate
an advanced prosthetic arm and hand using the best available
technologies. The second program, headed by the Applied Physics
Laboratory (APL) of Johns Hopkins University, is developing
enabling technologies that will give the next-generation prosthetic
the properties of a biological arm, so the amputee can
feel and manipulate objects naturally. This aggressive, four-year
program requires breakthroughs in neuroscience, robotics, electrical
power, sensing and actuation technologies.
While Sullivan and others test the first DARPA prototype, two
ORNL groups and dozens of other organizations are developing
candidate technologies for the second prototype, which will be
completed in late 2009. Art Clemons serves as the liaison between
the ORNL groups and their DARPA program managers, as well as
APL, the program's system integrator.
Fluid joints
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Mesofluidic prosthetic fingers with FILMskin patch.
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Sullivan's bionic arm and DARPA's first prototype both have
electric motors that provide seven degrees of freedom, or independent
movements. But John Jansen and Lonnie Love in ORNL's
Robotics and Energetic Systems Group are developing a new technology,
mesofluidics, that could provide actuation to prosthetic
finger, thumb, wrist, elbow and shoulder joints, conferring the
strength and speed of a natural arm and hand. Mesofluidic technology
is more compact and offers more force and speed capacity
than electromagnetic actuation in today's bionic arms. Love and
Jansen have demonstrated this technology on an elbow capable
of 60 foot-pounds of torque. They are developing a prototype
finger that has 20 pounds of pinch force.
The researchers designed and built a one-inch-high pump
driven by a tiny electric motor, compact valves to control the
flow of mineral oil or other fluid and actuators, such as pistons
in cylinders into which the fluid is pumped at a pressure of 2,000
pounds per square inch. Powered by a rechargeable lithiumpolymer
battery pack, the pump compresses and displaces
the fluid. As pressure builds up, the oil forces the piston to the
cylinder's end, causing the elbow or finger joint to bend.
"DARPA wanted to know if we could build an artificial arm
with elbow and wrist joints that could curl 60 pounds using mesofluidic
technology," Jansen says. "Most humans cannot lift such a
weight using elbow and wrist power."
"The 60 foot-pound elbow torque milestone was a classic
‘DARPA hard' objective that many researchers thought unachievable,"
Love says. "We met this DARPA milestone by demonstrating
the power and strength attainable from mesofluidic technology."
Electric-motor systems are inefficient as prosthetics partly
because they require extra energy for accelerating and braking
the arm's movements. "The energy used by our prosthetic arm
bending at the elbow is 21% of the input energy supplied by our
battery-powered, miniature hydraulic pump," Jansen says. "That
is the same energy efficiency as human muscle."
Another DARPA objective met at ORNL is finger pinch force,
which results from pushing any finger hard against the thumb.
Love and another robotics engineer, Randy Lind, designed
a mesofluidic finger using aluminum pistons and cylinders
connected by tiny valves.
"Our next goal will be to demonstrate that a mesofluidic finger
can exert 20 pounds of pinch force," Love says. "This design shows
that compact, high-strength actuators and valves can fit inside the
volume of a finger, an important benefit of mesofluidics."
The DARPA hand will have the human hand's dexterity and
24 degrees of freedom. "Our prosthetic fingers will be designed to
move at the same speed as human fingers," Jansen says. "Other
researchers are working on providing electrical feedback between
the brain and finger joints, to enable military amputees to resume
their normal activities, from pulling a gun trigger to typing on a
computer keyboard."
FILMskin
ORNL materials scientists
are collaborating with
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration
researchers to produce
a flexible, integrated,
lightweight, multifunctional
skin, or FILMskin,
for a next-generation
prosthetic hand and arm.
The team's challenge is to
make a revolutionary skin that will outperform current prosthetic
coverings in properties and functionality, allowing the
prosthetic wearer to feel heat, cold and touch.

FILMskin will sense heat, cold and pressure.
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Ilia Ivanov and Dave Geohegan, both of ORNL's Nanomaterials
Synthesis and Properties Group, are collaborating on
the FILMskin project with Joycelyn Harrison and Cheol Park,
both of the National Institute of Aerospace in NASA's Langley
Research Center. The ORNL researchers' task is to develop
material that matches real skin's thermal properties and,
then, a temperature sensor, whereas NASA's task is to develop
advanced pressure sensors. Together, the two organizations
will produce a one-inch-square patch of a lightweight, durable
FILMskin composite of a polymer and carbon nanotubes,
which will exhibit multifunctionality not possessed by current
prosthetic coverings.
The complex makeup of warm human skin is revealed in a
thermal image of the hand, which displays different colors indicating
different skin temperatures.
"By exploiting carbon nanotubes' ability to conduct heat,
we will create nanocomposites with the thermal conductivity
of muscle, fat or skin. We recently showed that, with
only 8 volume percent of nanotubes, we can make a polymer
composite with a thermal conductivity that far exceeds conductivities
of different tissues."
After creating thermally conductive polymer patches, the
researchers will incorporate an array of vertically aligned nanotubes
(VANTAs) to conduct heat quickly in the direction of the
nanotube alignment to temperature sensors. Ivanov recently
demonstrated that a heat pulse travels 20 times faster in a
polymer containing VANTAs than in a pure polymer, indicating
that the time response of temperature sensors positioned under
the skin can be greatly improved.
The next step is to design sensors that detect temperature and
pressure differences in FILMskin. Nanotubes could be used for
temperature sensing because their electrical resistance changes
when exposed to temperature changes. NASA's Park has shown
that nanotubes can be dispersed in a novel biocompatible polyimide
material and is now working on making the nanocomposite
more responsive to pressure.
The researchers know about pressure. Says Ivanov: "DARPA
wants to move really fast from basic research results to
implementation of the concepts it selects."—Carolyn Krause

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