Title: Manual Material Handling Design Criteria
1Manual Material Handling Design Criteria
2Introduction
- Stress/Strain Concept
- Workers affected by two types of forces
- Immediate physical environment
- Biomechanical forces of workers body
- Both forces fundamental to basic ergonomics
principles and described by the laws of Newtonian
mechanics and biological laws of life
(musculoskeletal and physiological systems
response to task demands - Stress/Strain involves external forces and effort
upon the worker which potential produces strain
on workers musculoskeletal and physiological
systems - Goal of ergonomicist is to reduce stress
sufficiently to minimize musculoskeletal and/or
physiological strain
3- MMH Stresses
- Three approaches used
- Biomechanical
- Studies the musculoskeletal structure such that
the physical, or mechanical, limits of the
individual are determined. - Physiological
- Studies the circulatory responses and the human
bodys metabolic response to various loads. - Psychophysical
- Establishes acceptable lifting weights to the
individual. The individual subjectively
quantifies his tolerance of stress (NIOSH, 1981)
4Biomechanical Approach
- Biomechanical Analysis for MMH
- Definition and Applications
- Biomechanics defined by Contini and Drillis
(1966) as the science which investigates the
effect of internal and external forces on human
and animal bodies in movement and at rest. - Winter (1979) defined biomechanics of human
movement as the interdiscipline which describes,
analyzes, and assesses human movements. - Frankel and Nordin (1980) defined biomechanics as
the discipline which uses laws of physics and
engineering concepts to describe motion undergone
by the various body segments and the forces
acting on these body parts during normal daily
activities
5Figure 3.1 Schematic Diagram of biomechanics,
modified from Contini and Drillis (1966)
6Biomechanics Definitions(Continued)
- General Biomechanics
- Concerned with the fundamental laws and rules
governing organic bodies at rest or in motion - Biostatics
- Considers those situations in which only analysis
of dobdies at rest or bodies moving in a straight
line at uniform velocity (i.e., no acceleration
generated, thus no force yield) is involved - Biodynamics
- Concerned with the description of the movement of
the body in time without consideration of the
forces involved (kinematics) and motion caused by
forces acting on the body (kinetics). - Both internal and external forces are included in
kinetic analysis of motion
7Occupational Biomechanics Definitions(Continued)
- Division of applied biomechanics that involves
applying the principles of biomechanics towards
work in improving everyday activities, especially
dealing with human disorders and performance
limitations which exist at present in a variety
of manual tasks in industry - Can be defined as the study of the physical
interaction of workers with their tools,
machines, and materials so as to enhance the
workers performance while minimizing the risk of
musculoskeletal disorders (Chaffin and
Andersson, 1984)
8The Body as a System of Levers
- Biomechanics based on the disciplines of
anthropometry, engineering science,
bioinstrumentation, and kinesiology. - Requires criteria for application of measurements
- Complexity of measurements and need for safety
have resulted in extensive use of modeling - Modeling allows simplification, eliminates much
of the experimentation and elaborate data
collection/analysis
9Figure 3.2
10The Body as a System of Levers
- Biomechanical approach requires evaluating the
body as a system of links and connecting joints - Each link has the same length
- Each link has the same mass and moment of inertia
(Center of Mass) - Various researchers use various links increases
in computing power has increased complexity of
modeling - Torso is often considered as a single or two-link
system for simplicity although more complex
modeling of the spine has been developed - Body segments rotated around joints by skeletal
muscles attachments of same are close to the
joint - Small contractile distance transformed into large
resistance and mechanical advantage large muscle
forces for small loads
11Stress on the Musculoskeletal System
- To estimate mechanical stress imposed on body
while at rest or in motion, must use various
mechanical properties of body segments to perform
mechanical analysis - Simplification and assumptions necessary use
biomechanical models of various degrees of
sophistication - Remember that forces are vector quantities with
four characteristics - Magnitude
- Direction
- Line of Action
- Point of Application
12Stress on the Musculoskeletal System
- Three types of Forces on Total Body System
- Gravitational Forces
- Those forces acting through the center of mass of
each segment with magnitude equal to the mass
times gravitational acceleration - Ground Reaction or External Forces
- Due to applied workload and body segment weights
- Muscle Forces
- Expressed in terms of net muscle moment acting at
a joint. Some other forces such as joint
friction and forces within the muscle also
contribute to net moement
13Static Analysis
- Used to study the rotational moments and forces
acting on the human body when no movement is
involved - Physical forces can be analyzed as if executed
statically (even when involve movement) - Dynamic considerations important (mechanically)
only when motion involves significant linear or
angular accelerations - If this is not the case, static analysis
techniques are useful for studying static and
quasi-static (quasi-isometric) physical activities
14Analysis of One Segment Link
- Example is forearm free body (see figure 3.3).
- Assumes no significant joint exists
- Assumes 8kg load held in hands
- Load acting at hand produces a torque at elbow as
does the weight of the forearm and hand - Involved muscles contractile activities produce
necessary torque to counterbalance aforementioned
torques - Since no body movement, static analysis is assumed
15Figure 3.3
16Analysis of One Segment Link(Continued)
- Static Equilibrium
- ? Moments (M) 0 ? Forces (Fx or Fy) 0
- Relative force and torque at elbow joint
- Yt 0 W1 Wa Fy (Force equilibrium)
- Where
- W1 the weight of the load
- Wa the weight of the forearm and hand
- Fx the reactive force at elbow joint in the
x-direction - Fy the reactive force at the elbow joint in the
y-direction - Yt the force in the Y direction
- Xt the force in the X direction.
17Analysis of One Segment Link(Continued)
- Reactive force at elbow joint in X direction
with no force developed in horizontal direction
is 0 - Reactive torque at elbow joint necessary to
counterbalance forces produced by the load
(weight body segment x distances from Center of
Rotation) - ?M 0 -W1(D1) Wa(Da) ME
- Where
- D1 the length of the link
- Da the distance from the elbow to the link
Center of Mass (CM) - ME the reactive moment at the elbow joint.
18Analysis of One Segment Link(Continued)
- Assume forearm no longer held horizontal but at
angle as in figure 3.4 - Reduction in the moment arm
- M 0 -W1(D1)(cos a) Wa(Da) (cos a) M1E
- Or
- M1E (cos a) x ME
- So, the load and the weight of the arm has an
additive effect on the elbow moment, with its
maximum moment value when the arm is horizontal
and a minimum effect when the arm is vertical
19Figure 3.4
20Analysis of Two Links
- Effects of loads on hand and accumulated body
segment weights transmitted to feet where
reaction force takes place - Can treat two-link model as two separate one-link
systems with same torque and force analyses - Static equilibrium condition, reactive forces and
torque should be equal but opposite (distal end
of the upper arm link)
21Figure 3.5
22Analysis of Two Links(continued)
- Muscle group should produce force/torque at the
shoulder joint to counteract force/torque of body
segment and reactive force from previous link
(calculated as 5.65kg) - Yt
- -2.1kg 5.65kg Rs
- Rs 7.75kg
- And
- ?M 0 -Wu(D2) Re(Du) - ME Ms
- -2.1kg x (0.13m) 5.65kg (0.33m) 3.92kg
m Ms - Ms 5.86kg m
23Analysis of Two Links(continued)
- Arm posture changes have a great effect on the
moments at the elbow and shoulder but no effect
on external reactive force - Previous two-link model is effective, except
vertical distance from point of rotation to
action line of force is used to calculate moments
(see figure 3.6)
24Figure 3.6
25Analysis of Multiple Links
- Use same method to calculate reactive force and
torque at each joint - Changes from the horizontal will change (increase
or decrease) the moment but not the force. - Different posture can have different reactive
moments and forces - Keep in mind Cartesian coordinate mapping systems
and force terms (positive or negative).
26Figure 3.7
27Analysis of Internal Forces
- Possible to look at models of internal muscles
(see figure 3.8) - Resulting moment equation can be expressed as
- ?M 0 - W1(D1) Wa(Da) Fm(Dm)
- Where
- ?M the sum of the moments about the elbow
- Fm the force due to muscular contraction
- Dm the distance from the elbow to the point of
muscle action on the link
28Figure 3.8
29Analysis of Internal Forces(continued)
- Substituting those previous values into the above
equation and isolating the unknowns produces - ?M 0 - 4kg(0.36m) 1.65kg(0.15m) Fm(Dm)
- Fm(Dm) 1.69kg-m
- The torque of the muscle contraction must equal
1.69kg-m for the link to maintain static balance.
If the value for Dm is assumed to be 0.05m, the
magnitude of the muscle force can then be
determined. - Fm(0.5m) 1.69kg m
- Fm 33.75 kg
30Analysis of Internal Forces(continued)
- Next, the horizontal and vertical force can be
determined. Since there are no horizontal forces
acting in this example, the horizontal force, Fx,
drops out of the analysis. Substituting the
known values into the following equation and
isolating the unknown, Fy, produces the vertical
force on the elbow. - Yt 0 -W1 Wa Fy Fm
- - 4kg 1.65kg Fy 33.75kg
- Fy -28.1kg
31Example 20kg Industrial Task
- Assume frequently handled 20kg load
- Creates a muscle contractile and vertical force
at the elbow as follows - M 0 -10kg(0.36m) 1.65kg(0.15m) Fm(0.05m)
- Fm 76.95kg
- Yt 0 -10kg 1.65kg Fy 79.95kg
- Fy -88.6kg
- Demonstrates the forces sustained in holding
common industrial load can be quite large.
32Dynamic Analysis
- See extensive notes on calculations of static and
dynamic forces, moments as a function of various
variables in notes - Note the effect of static versus dynamic loading
- Note the effect of various angular (e.g.,
postural) changes on the overall loads (forces,
moments, inertia) created when handling a
relatively small weight - Notice how much more complicated the modeling
becomes moving into a multivariable domain.
33Figure 3.9, 3.10, 3.11
34Figure 3.12
35Table 3.1