School of Podiatric Medicine Publications and Presentations

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-20-2025

Abstract

Objective: A modeling and simulation tool, OpenSim, was used to determine the optimal relationship between actuator stiffness and actuation timing of a passive ankle exoskeleton for reducing metabolic costs during walking. We hypothesized that the absolute minimum in total metabolic cost would exist at an actuation timing of 15% of stance and at a spring stiffness of 7.5 kN/m. We also hypothesized that a local minimum in total metabolic cost would exist at an actuation timing of 50% of stance. Methods: Bilateral kinematics and kinetics data were collected on a healthy male walking overground wearing his regular tennis shoe. The passive ankle exoskeleton geometry and the spring actuator were integrated into the OpenSim model. Simulations were performed for every combination of 25 spring stiffnesses ranging from 5.5 kN/m to 17.5 kN/m (increments of 0.5 kN/m) and 10 actuation timings ranging from 15% to 60% of stance (increments of 5%). Total energy expenditure was calculated as the sum of the energy expenditure of all the muscles in the model. Results: The greatest reduction in energy consumption (−2.67%) was observed at an actuation timing of approximately 15% of the stance phase with a spring stiffness of ~5.5 kN/m. A quadratic relationship between spring stiffness and energy consumption was identified (R2 = 0.99), with an optimal stiffness of approximately 5.5 kN/m minimizing the energy cost. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that OpenSim effectively predicts optimal exoskeleton parameters, supporting personalized assistance to improve energy efficiency and rehabilitation outcomes.

Comments

© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Publication Title

Biomimetics

Academic Level

faculty

DOI

10.3390/biomimetics11010002

Included in

Podiatry Commons

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