Design of an Automated Fiber Placement Machine to Build Prosthetic Sockets

This thesis presents research towards an automated manufacturing method for producing prosthetic sockets and orthotic interfaces. The prosthetic socket is a noninvasive mechanical interface between the residuum and the prosthesis. There is no standardized method for socket fabrication, but they are...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jaeger, Aaron
Other Authors: Herr, Hugh
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/142806
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9163-8939
Description
Summary:This thesis presents research towards an automated manufacturing method for producing prosthetic sockets and orthotic interfaces. The prosthetic socket is a noninvasive mechanical interface between the residuum and the prosthesis. There is no standardized method for socket fabrication, but they are generally produced by hand laminating a carbon fiber or other composite around a hand sculpted form. This process is expensive, lacks quality control, and limits future socket improvements. Automated manufacturing is a potential way to reduce labor costs and improved quality through standardization. Automated fiber placement (AFP) is a process commonly used in the aerospace industry to make large, complex composite parts where a robotic gantry lays down individual pre-impregnated strips of fiber tow. This thesis prototyped a proof-of-concept desktop AFP machine with four degrees of freedom designed for building prosthetic sockets for $10,000 at a scale feasible for small clinics, university research labs, and residential settings. The AFP prototype demonstrated the basic ability to automatically place and laminate strips of fiber. During testing the prototype demonstrated a constant compaction force at 75N with standard deviation of 1.2N over varying surface and produced the 10N of fiber tension that is required for composite lamination.