| Literature DB >> 29143768 |
Francesca Romana Parente1, Marco Santonico2, Alessandro Zompanti3, Mario Benassai4, Giuseppe Ferri5, Arnaldo D'Amico6, Giorgio Pennazza7.
Abstract
The aim of this work is the development of a contactless capacitive sensory system for the detection of (Electrocardiographic) ECG-like signals. The acquisition approach is based on a capacitive coupling with the patient body performed by electrodes integrated in a front-end circuit. The proposed system is able to detect changes in the electric charge related to the heart activity. Due to the target signal weakness and to the presence of other undesired signals, suitable amplification stages and analogue filters are required. Simulated results allowed us to evaluate the effectiveness of the approach, whereas experimental measurements, recorded without contact to the skin, have validated the practical effectiveness of the proposed architecture. The system operates with a supply voltage of ±9 V with an overall power consumption of about 10 mW. The analogue output of the electronic interface is connected to an ATmega328 microcontroller implementing the A/D conversion and the data acquisition. The collected data can be displayed on any multimedia support for real-time tracking applications.Entities:
Keywords: ECG; biomedical electronics; capacitive sensors; contactless; wearable
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29143768 PMCID: PMC5713015 DOI: 10.3390/s17112474
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The proposed system block scheme.
Figure 2Electrode positioning on the human body.
Figure 3The front-end block.
Figure 4Active band-pass filter schematic circuit.
Figure 5Active band-pass filter transfer function.
Figure 6Modified Twin-T notch filter schematic circuit.
Figure 7Modified notch filter transfer function and its dependence on n.
Figure 8Circuit schematic of the whole analogue system.
Component values.
| Name | Value [Ω] | Name | Value [Ω] | Name | Value [F] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 G | 8.2 k | 180 p | |||
| 12 k | 31.82 k | 220 n | |||
| 3.3 M | 3.3 k | 100 n | |||
| 33 k | 1 k | 100 n | |||
| 4.7 k | 1.8 k | 15 n |
Figure 9System overview (the box containing the electronic board, the electronic board, the three electrodes connected to the system).
Figure 10Simulation of the (a) input signal (b) output signal.
Figure 11Heart signal recordings (two electrodes placed on the t-shirt of one of the ten control individuals tested). The ECG-like signal is displayed in real time on the window of the dedicated SW. The detail in the zoom put in evidence that the wave T and the complex QRST can be easily identified, while the P wave is often confused with similar artefacts.