Design and integration of a parallel, soft robotic end-effector for extracorporeal ultrasound

L Lindenroth, RJ Housden, S Wang… - IEEE Transactions …, 2019 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 2019ieeexplore.ieee.org
Objective: In this work we address limitations in state-of-the-art ultrasound robots by
designing and integrating a novel soft robotic system for ultrasound imaging. It employs the
inherent qualities of soft fluidic actuators to establish safe, adaptable interaction between
ultrasound probe and patient. Methods: We acquire clinical data to determine the movement
ranges and force levels required in prenatal foetal ultrasound imaging and design the soft
robotic end-effector accordingly. We verify its mechanical characteristics, derive and validate …
Objective
In this work we address limitations in state-of-the-art ultrasound robots by designing and integrating a novel soft robotic system for ultrasound imaging. It employs the inherent qualities of soft fluidic actuators to establish safe, adaptable interaction between ultrasound probe and patient.
Methods
We acquire clinical data to determine the movement ranges and force levels required in prenatal foetal ultrasound imaging and design the soft robotic end-effector accordingly. We verify its mechanical characteristics, derive and validate a kinetostatic model and demonstrate controllability and imaging capabilities on an ultrasound phantom.
Results
The soft robot exhibits the desired stiffness characteristics and is able to reach 100% of the required workspace when no external force is present, and 95% of the workspace when considering its compliance. The model can accurately predict the end-effector pose with a mean error of  mm in position and in orientation. The derived controller is, with an average position error of 0.39 mm, able to track a target pose efficiently without and with externally applied loads. Ultrasound images acquired with the system are of equally good quality compared to a manual sonographer scan.
Conclusion
The system is able to withstand loads commonly applied during foetal ultrasound scans and remains controllable with a motion range similar to manual scanning.
Significance
The proposed soft robot presents a safe, cost-effective solution to offloading sonographers in day-to-day scanning routines. The design and modelling paradigms are greatly generalizable and particularly suitable for designing soft robots for physical interaction tasks.
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