Close X
Monday, November 25, 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 Woman's Brain Tumor Turns Out To Be 'Evil Twin' Complete With Bone, Hair And Teeth

    Indian Origin Woman's Brain Tumor Turns Out To Be 'Evil Twin' Complete With Bone, Hair And Teeth
    An Indian computer science PhD student from Hyderabad underwent brain surgery to find what she jokingly called her "evil twin sister who's been torturing me for the past 26 years".

    Indian Origin Woman's Brain Tumor Turns Out To Be 'Evil Twin' Complete With Bone, Hair And Teeth

    Indian-Origin Millionaire Ronan Ghosh Caught Shoplifting £200 Of Wine And Meat In Birmingham

    Indian-Origin Millionaire Ronan Ghosh Caught Shoplifting £200 Of Wine And Meat In Birmingham
    Ronan Ghosh, 39, was shopping at the Tesco outlet in Birmingham, West Midlands, on February 21 and he only paid for the items in his trolley but did not pay for the items he kept in his bag

    Indian-Origin Millionaire Ronan Ghosh Caught Shoplifting £200 Of Wine And Meat In Birmingham

    Japanese Train Sets World Speed Record, Clocks 603 Kilometres Per Hour

    Japanese Train Sets World Speed Record, Clocks 603 Kilometres Per Hour
    A Japanese high-speed train broke its own world speed record on Tuesday, clocking 603 kilometres per hour (374.69 miles per hour), after having set the previous record less than a week ago.

    Japanese Train Sets World Speed Record, Clocks 603 Kilometres Per Hour

    How Apple And Its Products Are Inspired By Canadian Great Glenn Gould

    How Apple And Its Products Are Inspired By Canadian Great Glenn Gould
    At the company's internal Apple University — a somewhat secretive institution by reputation — professor Joshua Cohen delivers three-hour seminars on the late, great Canadian pianist to classes of 15 students.

    How Apple And Its Products Are Inspired By Canadian Great Glenn Gould

    Bank Of Canada Governor, A Star Trek Buff, Not A Fan Of Spock Doodles On Bills

    Bank Of Canada Governor, A Star Trek Buff, Not A Fan Of Spock Doodles On Bills
    OTTAWA — The governor of the Bank of Canada may be a serious Star Trek buff, but he's not about to encourage others to doodle Spock ears on Sir Wilfrid Laurier's image on the $5 bill.

    Bank Of Canada Governor, A Star Trek Buff, Not A Fan Of Spock Doodles On Bills

    150th Assassination Anniversary: Lincoln Assassination Plot Had Canadian Link In Origin And Ending

    150th Assassination Anniversary: Lincoln Assassination Plot Had Canadian Link In Origin And Ending
    Historians say the plot to assassinate U.S. President Abraham Lincoln 150 years ago today can tie both its origin and its ending to Canada.

    150th Assassination Anniversary: Lincoln Assassination Plot Had Canadian Link In Origin And Ending