Title :
Smart Garments for Emergency Operators: The ProeTEX Project
Author :
Curone, Davide ; Secco, Emanuele Lindo ; Tognetti, Alessandro ; Loriga, Giannicola ; Dudnik, Gabriela ; Risatti, Michele ; Whyte, Rhys ; Bonfiglio, Annalisa ; Magenes, Giovanni
Author_Institution :
Eur. Centre for Training & Res. in Earthquake Eng., Pavia, Italy
fDate :
5/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Financed by the European Commission, a consortium of 23 European partners, consisting of universities, research institutions, industries, and organizations operating in the field of emergency management, is developing a new generation of ??smart?? garments for emergency-disaster personnel. Garments integrate newly developed wearable and textile solutions, such as commercial portable sensors and devices, in order to continuously monitor risks endangering rescuers´ lives. The system enables detection of health-state parameters of the users (heart rate, breathing rate, body temperature, blood oxygen saturation, position, activity, and posture) and environmental variables (external temperature, presence of toxic gases, and heat flux passing through the garments), to process data and remotely transmit useful information to the operation manager. The European-integrated project, called ProeTEX (Protection e-Textiles: Micro-Nano-Structured fiber systems for Emergency-Disaster Wear) started on February, 2006 and will end on July, 2010. During this 4.5 years period, three subsequent generations of sensorized garments are being released. This paper proposes an overview of the project and gives a description of the second-generation prototypes, delivered at the end of 2008.
Keywords :
biomedical electronics; biomedical equipment; biosensors; blood; intelligent sensors; oxygen; protective clothing; safety devices; textiles; ProeTEX; an sensorized garments; blood oxygen saturation; body temperature; breathing rate; emergency operators; emergency-disaster personnel; environmental variables; external temperature; health-state parameters; heart rate; heat flux; micro-nanostructured fiber systems; position; protection e-textiles; smart garments; toxic gases; Multisensors system; physiological and environmental monitoring; smart textile; wearable electronics; Body Temperature; Clothing; Electronics, Medical; Emergency Medical Technicians; Equipment Failure Analysis; Heart Rate; Humans; Materials Testing; Monitoring, Ambulatory; Rescue Work; Respiratory Rate; Telemetry; Textiles; User-Computer Interface;
Journal_Title :
Information Technology in Biomedicine, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TITB.2010.2045003