| Literature DB >> 28413376 |
Kyung-In Jang1, Han Na Jung1, Jung Woo Lee1, Sheng Xu2, Yu Hao Liu1, Yinji Ma3, Jae-Woong Jeong4, Young Min Song5, Jeonghyun Kim1, Bong Hun Kim1, Anthony Banks1, Jean Won Kwak1, Yiyuan Yang1, Dawei Shi1, Zijun Wei1, Xue Feng3, Ungyu Paik6, Yonggang Huang7, Roozbeh Ghaffari8, John A Rogers1.
Abstract
This paper introduces a class of ferromagnetic, folded, soft composite material for skin-interfaced electrodes with releasable interfaces to stretchable, wireless electronic measurement systems. These electrodes establish intimate, adhesive contacts to the skin, in dimensionally stable formats compatible with multiple days of continuous operation, with several key advantages over conventional hydrogel based alternatives. The reported studies focus on aspects ranging from ferromagnetic and mechanical behavior of the materials systems, to electrical properties associated with their skin interface, to system-level integration for advanced electrophysiological monitoring applications. The work combines experimental measurement and theoretical modeling to establish the key design considerations. These concepts have potential uses across a diverse set of skin-integrated electronic technologies.Entities:
Keywords: composite; dry electrodes; electrophysiology; equivalent circuit model; ferromagnetism; finite element method; folded electrode; impedance; stretchable electronics
Year: 2016 PMID: 28413376 PMCID: PMC5390688 DOI: 10.1002/adfm.201603146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Funct Mater ISSN: 1616-301X Impact factor: 18.808