Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

This Prosthetic Foot To Help Disabled Women Wear Heels

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 May, 2016 11:10 AM
    A team of students has developed an early version of a foot that enables women adjusting to life with a prosthetic limb to wear heels up to four inches high.
     
    "High heels have become an integral part of the female lifestyle in modern society, permeating through all aspects of life -- professional and social," said the authors from Johns Hopkins University who made the prosthetic foot as part of their final senior project in mechanical engineering. 
     
    "For female veterans of the US armed services with lower limb amputations, that seemingly innocuous but so pervasive and decidedly feminine part of their lives is gone," they added.
     
    So, they took up the challenge of creating a foot that adjusts without a separate tool to a range of heel heights, holds position without slipping, supports up to 250 pounds or 114 kg, weighs less than three pounds or 1.3 kg and, of course, is slender enough to accommodate a woman's shoe.
     
    They tried a balloon in the heel to give it spring or "energy return", as engineers say. That didn't work. 
     
    They tried a mousetrap spring but that didn't work either. Then they tried a sideways sandwich of 23 slender titanium plates to form the foot itself but that was too heavy and not springy. 
     
    A 20-layer carbon fibre footplate failed a stress test, but a 28-layer version worked, forming the base of the foot which the team now calls the "Prominence".
     
    They built a heel-adjustment mechanism with two interlocking aluminum disks. It opens and closes with an attached lever at the ankle. 
     
    For the ankle, they used an off-the-shelf hydraulic unit that enables a smooth gait and flexing at the sole.
     
    Alexandra Capellini, a Johns Hopkins University junior who lost her right leg to bone cancer as a child, tried the foot with a flat shoe and liked it.
     
    The design is still in progress. It will take time to assess the commercial appeal and potential of the "Prominence", including the question of whether anything the team created could qualify for a patent.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin Physicist Madhu Menon Discovers Material Better Than Graphene

    Indian-Origin Physicist Madhu Menon Discovers Material Better Than Graphene
    An Indian-origin scientist has developed a new one atom-thick flat material that could upstage the wonder material graphene for having properties allowing it to be used in advance digital technology.

    Indian-Origin Physicist Madhu Menon Discovers Material Better Than Graphene

    Women Riders Wanted: Motorcycle Trade Shows Look To Attract New Bikers

    Women Riders Wanted: Motorcycle Trade Shows Look To Attract New Bikers
    Last year, Sylvie Brisebois fulfilled her longtime dream of taking a solo motorcycle ride to California.

    Women Riders Wanted: Motorcycle Trade Shows Look To Attract New Bikers

    In Sweden's 1st Unmanned Food Store, All You Need Is A Phone

    In Sweden's 1st Unmanned Food Store, All You Need Is A Phone
    It was a chaotic, late-night scramble to buy baby food with a screaming toddler in the backseat that gave Robert Ilijason the idea to open Sweden's first unmanned convenience store.

    In Sweden's 1st Unmanned Food Store, All You Need Is A Phone

    5 Facts About Leap Year And Why There Is A Feb. 29 This Year

    5 Facts About Leap Year And Why There Is A Feb. 29 This Year

    TORONTO — Ever wondered why we have leap year? Or exactly what it means for people born on ...

    5 Facts About Leap Year And Why There Is A Feb. 29 This Year

    Leap Year Has A Rich History - In Marriage Proposals

    Leap Year Has A Rich History - In Marriage Proposals
    Here's a look at that magical mark on the calendar as it relates to love and marriage, courtesy of Monmouth University historian Katherine Parkin, who has researched the topic.

    Leap Year Has A Rich History - In Marriage Proposals

    Twin Utah Moms Each Give Birth To Their 2nd Set Of Twins

    Twin Utah Moms Each Give Birth To Their 2nd Set Of Twins
    Kerri Bunker and Kelli Wall delivered twins within weeks of each other at a hospital in Orem, south of Salt Lake City. Years ago, they gave birth to their first sets of twins, now 4- and 5-year-olds, at the same hospital a few months apart.

    Twin Utah Moms Each Give Birth To Their 2nd Set Of Twins