Artículos de revistas
Digital controller design considering hardware constraints: application in a paraplegic patient
Fecha
2014-09-01Registro en:
Revista Brasileira de Engenharia Biomédica. SBEB - Sociedade Brasileira de Engenharia Biomédica, v. 30, n. 3, p. 232-241, 2014.
1517-3151
10.1590/1517-3151.0196
S1517-31512014000300005
S1517-31512014000300005.pdf
0250066159980825
8755160580142626
8630973561889272
8879964582778840
5062087380571462
0000-0002-1072-3814
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Londrina State University Center of Technology and Urbanism Department of Electrical Engineering
Institución
Resumen
INTRODUCTION: A methodology was developed for implementing closed-loop control algorithms and for evaluating the behavior of a system, considering certain component restrictions used in laboratory implementation. METHODS: Mathematical functions representing a model of the biological system were used for knee extension/flexion movements. A Proportional Integral Derivative (PID) controller and another one using the root locus method were designed to control a patient’s leg position by applying functional electrical stimulation (FES). The controllers were simulated in Matlab and ISIS Proteus. After the simulations were performed, the codes were embedded in a microcontroller, and tests were conducted on a paraplegic volunteer. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first time that ISIS Proteus software resources have been used prior to implementing a closed-loop system designed to control the leg position of patients. RESULTS:This method obviates the application of initial controller tests directly to patients. The response obtained in the experiment with a paraplegic patient complied with the specifications set in terms of the steady-state error, the settling time, and the percentage overshoot. The proposed procedure was successfully applied for the implementation of a controller used to control the leg position of a paraplegic person by electrical muscle stimulation. CONCLUSION:The methodology presented in this manuscript can contribute to the implementation of analog and digital controllers because hardware limitations are typically not taken into account in the design of controllers.