Design and Control of a Flexible Tube Manipulator for Optical Irradiation of a Superficial Tumor
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Abstract
Flexible manipulators have proven their potential in medical applications like minimally invasive
surgeries, endoscopies, laparoscopies, colonoscopies, etc. One of the promising areas in medicine
where flexible manipulators are required, is cancer treatment through targeted thermal therapy.
The treatment method involves irradiation of a targeted superficial tumor in different orientations
for prolonged sessions that requires manipulation of a flexible tube-like medical optical fiber
bundle by a surgeon. The manual manipulation of the flexible tube makes the treatment process
tiring for the surgeon who is accustomed to human error. Thus, an automated solution is required
that can actively manipulate the flexible tube around the targeted tumor and thereby, increase the
effectiveness of the therapy.
This thesis provides the required basis for developing a flexible tube manipulator (FTM)
with trajectory control for use in tumor irradiation procedures. To develop the FTM, shape memory
alloy (SMA) actuators are selected due to their low weight and size, ease of installation, and
excellent biocompatibility. First, the displacement generation capabilities of different SMA
actuator configurations like SMA wire-bias spring, antagonistic SMA wires, SMA spring–bias
spring and antagonistic SMA springs are investigated. In this direction, numerical implementation
of SMA wire-bias spring actuator model is independently carried out by three iterative solvers:
Newton-Raphson, implicit differential equation solver, and trust-region-dogleg algorithm and
through a comparative evaluation, the implicit differential equation solver (IDES) is found as the
most suitable solver. Next, the displacement generation capability of a two-way actuator i.e.
antagonistic SMA wire actuator is calculated through the mathematical model. The reported
results indicate low displacement generation capabilities of SMA wire actuators.
As SMA is a path-dependent material, it is important to include the history of traveled paths in
the modeling scheme to bridge the gaps between actual and simulated results. No SMA spring
model is found in the literature that considers this effect in SMA spring modeling. Therefore, in
the present work, an established loading history based SMA wire phase kinetics model is adapted
for the SMA spring which incorporates path history in the form of memory parameters to develop
a mathematical model of the SMA spring. Thereafter, the mathematical model of SMA spring normal spring as bias is developed to determine the output displacement. Next, as two-way actuators, the output displacements of SMA spring-SMA wire and antagonistic SMA spring
configurations are determined through mathematical modeling. Among all three SMA spring
configurations, the antagonistic SMA spring actuator demonstrated the highest output
displacement and is selected as the most suitable SMA actuator configuration for FTM. Parametric
variations are performed considering variations in both geometrical and material parameters. It is
observed that geometrical parameters significantly affect the output force and displacement of
antagonistic SMA spring configuration as compared to its material parameters. Further, the effect
of arbitrary loading on the performance of the antagonistic SMA actuator is considered as one of
the parameters. Higher force and equal displacement generation capabilities are reported under
arbitrary thermo-mechanical loading as compared to general thermo-mechanical loading.
After developing the actuator model, two pairs of antagonistic SMA spring actuators are
selected to bend the tube in two orthogonal planes. The bending mechanics of the flexible tube is
determined using a circular arc model and dynamics of FTM is decoupled into dynamics of 4
single-input single-output systems. A complete mathematical model of FTM is then constructed
by combining the actuator dynamics with the dynamics of the flexible tube. The parametric
variations are performed in simulations considering geometry and effect of pre-strain of SMA
spring. The reported results concluded the diameter of the spring wire is the most influencing
parameter that considerably affects the performance of the manipulator.
To investigate the performance of FTM in trajectory tracking applications, a state space
representation of a single SMA spring-based FTM is formulated and a robust controller is applied
for tracking different trajectories. The same controller is proposed to develop a model-based
control architecture of the complete model of FTM. Due to the unavailability of required sensors
and inherent assumptions in the mathematical model, a modeless control scheme is developed and
some 2-D shapes like circles, oval, concentric circles, and irregular shapes are considered based
on real-life encountered tumor shapes to demonstrate the performance of the proof of concept
prototype of FTM. The experimental results demonstrated the capability of FTM to track any
arbitrarily shaped tumor trajectory and therefore, confirm the pertinence of FTM in the application
concerning optical irradiation of superficial tumors. It is aspired that the modeling and control
architecture for SMA actuators developed in this thesis can be utilized in practical applications.
Description
PhD Thesis
