Title :
Nonwoven Fabric Active Electrodes for Biopotential Measurement During Normal Daily Activity
Author :
Kang, Tae-Ho ; Merritt, Carey R. ; Grant, Edward ; Pourdeyhimi, Behnam ; Nagle, H. Troy
Author_Institution :
Samsung Electron. Co. Ltd., Suwon
Abstract :
Body movement is responsible for most of the interference during physiological data acquisition during normal daily activities. In this paper, we introduce nonwoven fabric active electrodes that provide the comfort required for clothing while robustly recording physiological data in the presence of body movement. The nonwoven fabric active electrodes were designed and fabricated using both hand- and screen-printing thick-film techniques. Nonstretchable nonwoven (Evolon 100) was chosen as the flexible fabric substrate and a silver filled polymer ink (Creative Materials CMI 112-15) was used to form a transducer layer and conductive lines on the nonwoven fabrics. These nonwoven fabric active electrodes can be easily integrated into clothing for wearable health monitoring applications. Test results indicate that nonwoven textile-based sensors show considerable promise for physiological data acquisition in wearable healthcare monitoring applications.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; biomechanics; biomedical electrodes; biomedical measurement; fabrics; filled polymers; health care; thick films; Evolon 100; biopotential measurement; body movement; flexible fabric substrate; hand-printing thick-film techniques; nonstretchable nonwoven; nonwoven fabric active electrodes; nonwoven textile-based sensors; normal daily activity; physiological data acquisition; screen-printing thick-film techniques; silver filled polymer ink; wearable healthcare monitoring applications; Biomedical monitoring; Clothing; Data acquisition; Electrodes; Fabrics; Ink; Interference; Polymers; Robustness; Silver; Active electrodes; biopotential measurement; fabric sensors; wearable biomedical sensors; Activities of Daily Living; Amplifiers; Clothing; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Humans; Microelectrodes; Miniaturization; Monitoring, Ambulatory; Transducers;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2007.910678