Structural design of a passive wearable exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesting operation

Harvesting of oil palm fresh fruit bunches is still performed manually, involving extensive energy, awkward postures or repetitive motion, and often under strenuous conditions. Exoskeleton technologies are increasingly being explored for performance augmentation and ergonomics intervention in indust...

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Main Authors: Mohamad, Muhammad Fuad, Sowat, Sharence Nai, Selamat, Hazlina, Azaman, Aizreena, Harith, Hazreen H.
Format: Article
Published: Malaysian Palm Oil Board 2022
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/103316/
http://jopr.mpob.gov.my/structural-design-of-a-passive-wearable-exoskeleton-to-assist-oil-palm-harvesting-operation/
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
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spelling my.upm.eprints.1033162023-06-26T07:37:58Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/103316/ Structural design of a passive wearable exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesting operation Mohamad, Muhammad Fuad Sowat, Sharence Nai Selamat, Hazlina Azaman, Aizreena Harith, Hazreen H. Harvesting of oil palm fresh fruit bunches is still performed manually, involving extensive energy, awkward postures or repetitive motion, and often under strenuous conditions. Exoskeleton technologies are increasingly being explored for performance augmentation and ergonomics intervention in industrial settings. For challenging environments, like the oil palm plantation, the dynamic interactions between user, task and environment is non-trivial. Importantly, an exoskeleton should not impede a worker’s movement and task performance throughout the period of wear. Intrinsically, designing an exoskeleton for oil palm harvesting entails that the dynamic interactions between the harvester, the pole, and surrounding objects is considered early in the design process. We adopted the systems approach to designing an upper limb exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesters. The proposed design is a slimline passive exoskeleton that provides an assistive force through compression springs in the upper arm region. Structural analysis and a preliminary prototype evaluation were performed for design verification. The weakest component was the back plate. Nevertheless, permanent deformation would only occur when an equivalent of 26 kg load is applied to the exoskeleton arm.Future work includes optimising the design and elucidating its long-term effects on the harvester’s efficiency and field productivity through biomechanical analysis and field tests. Malaysian Palm Oil Board 2022 Article PeerReviewed Mohamad, Muhammad Fuad and Sowat, Sharence Nai and Selamat, Hazlina and Azaman, Aizreena and Harith, Hazreen H. (2022) Structural design of a passive wearable exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesting operation. Journal of Oil Palm Research. pp. 1-15. ISSN 2811-4701 (In Press) http://jopr.mpob.gov.my/structural-design-of-a-passive-wearable-exoskeleton-to-assist-oil-palm-harvesting-operation/ 10.21894/jopr.2022.0075
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
description Harvesting of oil palm fresh fruit bunches is still performed manually, involving extensive energy, awkward postures or repetitive motion, and often under strenuous conditions. Exoskeleton technologies are increasingly being explored for performance augmentation and ergonomics intervention in industrial settings. For challenging environments, like the oil palm plantation, the dynamic interactions between user, task and environment is non-trivial. Importantly, an exoskeleton should not impede a worker’s movement and task performance throughout the period of wear. Intrinsically, designing an exoskeleton for oil palm harvesting entails that the dynamic interactions between the harvester, the pole, and surrounding objects is considered early in the design process. We adopted the systems approach to designing an upper limb exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesters. The proposed design is a slimline passive exoskeleton that provides an assistive force through compression springs in the upper arm region. Structural analysis and a preliminary prototype evaluation were performed for design verification. The weakest component was the back plate. Nevertheless, permanent deformation would only occur when an equivalent of 26 kg load is applied to the exoskeleton arm.Future work includes optimising the design and elucidating its long-term effects on the harvester’s efficiency and field productivity through biomechanical analysis and field tests.
format Article
author Mohamad, Muhammad Fuad
Sowat, Sharence Nai
Selamat, Hazlina
Azaman, Aizreena
Harith, Hazreen H.
spellingShingle Mohamad, Muhammad Fuad
Sowat, Sharence Nai
Selamat, Hazlina
Azaman, Aizreena
Harith, Hazreen H.
Structural design of a passive wearable exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesting operation
author_facet Mohamad, Muhammad Fuad
Sowat, Sharence Nai
Selamat, Hazlina
Azaman, Aizreena
Harith, Hazreen H.
author_sort Mohamad, Muhammad Fuad
title Structural design of a passive wearable exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesting operation
title_short Structural design of a passive wearable exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesting operation
title_full Structural design of a passive wearable exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesting operation
title_fullStr Structural design of a passive wearable exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesting operation
title_full_unstemmed Structural design of a passive wearable exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesting operation
title_sort structural design of a passive wearable exoskeleton to assist oil palm harvesting operation
publisher Malaysian Palm Oil Board
publishDate 2022
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/103316/
http://jopr.mpob.gov.my/structural-design-of-a-passive-wearable-exoskeleton-to-assist-oil-palm-harvesting-operation/
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