DocumentCode
38348
Title
A Hybrid Low Power Biopatch for Body Surface Potential Measurement
Author
Geng Yang ; Jian Chen ; Li Xie ; Jia Mao ; Tenhunen, Hannu ; Li-Rong Zheng
Author_Institution
Sch. of Inf. & Commun. Technol., iPack VINN Excellence Center, R. Inst. of Technol., Kista, Sweden
Volume
17
Issue
3
fYear
2013
fDate
May-13
Firstpage
591
Lastpage
599
Abstract
This paper presents a wearable biopatch prototype for body surface potential measurement. It combines three key technologies, including mixed-signal system on chip (SoC) technology, inkjet printing technology, and anisotropic conductive adhesive (ACA) bonding technology. An integral part of the biopatch is a low-power low-noise SoC. The SoC contains a tunable analog front end, a successive approximation register analog-to-digital converter, and a reconfigurable digital controller. The electrodes, interconnections, and interposer are implemented by inkjet-printing the silver ink precisely on a flexible substrate. The reliability of printed traces is evaluated by static bending tests. ACA is used to attach the SoC to the printed structures and form the flexible hybrid system. The biopatch prototype is light and thin with a physical size of 16 cm × 16 cm. Measurement results show that low-noise concurrent electrocardiogram signals from eight chest points have been successfully recorded using the implemented biopatch.
Keywords
adhesive bonding; analogue-digital conversion; bioelectric potentials; biomedical electrodes; biomedical electronics; electrocardiography; flexible electronics; ink jet printing; integrated circuit interconnections; integrated circuit reliability; low-power electronics; mixed analogue-digital integrated circuits; system-on-chip; anisotropic conductive adhesive bonding technology; body surface potential measurement; electrodes; flexible substrate; hybrid low power biopatch; inkjet printing technology; interconnections; interposer; low-noise concurrent electrocardiogram signals; low-power low-noise SoC; mixed-signal system on chip technology; printed trace reliability; reconfigurable digital controller; silver ink; static bending tests; successive approximation register analog-to-digital converter; tunable analog front end; wearable biopatch prototype; Active cable; anisotropic conductive adhesive (ACA); biopatch; body surface potential; inkjet printing; system on chip (SoC); wearable device;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical and Health Informatics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2168-2194
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JBHI.2013.2252017
Filename
6509408
Link To Document