| Literature DB >> 34247646 |
Milad Alizadeh-Meghrazi1,2,3, Binbin Ying4,5, Alessandra Schlums6,5, Emily Lam7,5, Ladan Eskandarian8,5, Farhana Abbas9,5, Gurjant Sidhu10,5, Amin Mahnam5, Bastien Moineau5, Milos R Popovic11,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Continuous long-term electrocardiography monitoring has been increasingly recognized for early diagnosis and management of different types of cardiovascular diseases. To find an alternative to Ag/AgCl gel electrodes that are improper for this application scenario, many efforts have been undertaken to develop novel flexible dry textile electrodes integrated into the everyday garments. With significant progresses made to address the potential issues (e.g., low signal-to-noise ratio, high skin-electrode impedance, motion artifact, and low durability), the lack of standard evaluation procedure hinders the further development of dry electrodes (mainly the design and optimization).Entities:
Keywords: Carbon-contained yarn; Dry textile electrodes; Electrocardiography (ECG); Electrophysiological monitoring; Long-term biosignal monitoring; Printed electronics; Remote healthcare; Silver-plated yarn; Textile computing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34247646 PMCID: PMC8274056 DOI: 10.1186/s12938-021-00905-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Eng Online ISSN: 1475-925X Impact factor: 2.819
Fig. 1Electrode–skin interface with a gel electrode vs. b dry contact electrode. Demonstrating differences in stratum corneum impedance electrical model when exposed to the moisture of electrolyte gel [31]
Fig. 2Dry textile electrodes. a Schematic of a dry textile electrode. b-i The front and b-ii back of a sample dry textile electrode. Scale bar is 2 cm. c Flat textile electrode made of silver yarn (FS). d Raised 3D textile electrode made of silver yarn (RS). e Flat textile electrode made of carbon yarn (FC). f Raised 3D textile electrode made of carbon yarn (RC). g Flat textile electrode with screen-printed coating. h Raised 3D textile electrode with screen-printed coating. Scale bar is 1 cm
Coating formulations successfully screen-printed onto dry textile electrodes
| Coating material composition | Layers | Heat curing | Pass/fail |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carbon | 3 | 140 °C, 2 min | Pass on FS, RS, FC, and RCa |
| Carbon + 2.5% ILb | 3 | 140 °C, 2 min | Pass on FS, RS, FC, and RC |
| Carbon + 5% IL | 3 | 140 °C, 2 min | Pass on FS, RS, FC, and RC |
| Carbon + 7.5% IL | 3 | 140 °C, 2 min | Pass on FS and FC Fail on RS and RC |
| PEDOT:PSS + 12.5% PDMS | 2 | 150 °C, 10 min | Pass on FS Fail on RS, FC, and RC |
| PEDOT:PSS + 6.25% PDMS | 2 | 150 °C, 10 min | Pass on FS Fail on RS, FC, and RC |
| (PEDOT:PSS + 6.25% PDMS) + 2.5% IL | 2 | 150 °C, 10 min | Pass on FS Fail on RS, FC, and RC |
| (PEDOT:PSS + 6.25% PDMS) + 5% IL | 2 | 150 °C, 10 min | Pass on FS Fail on RS, FC, and RC |
| PEDOT:PSS + 12.5% (PDMS + 1% CNT)c | 2 | 150 °C, 10 min | Pass on FS Fail on RS, FC, and RC |
| PEDOT:PSS + 6.25% (PDMS + 1% CNT) | 2 | 150 °C, 10 min | Pass on FS Fail on RS, FC, and RC |
aFS flat textile electrodes made of silver yarn, RS raised 3D textile electrodes made of silver yarn, FC flat textile electrodes made of carbon yarn, RC raised 3D textile electrodes made of carbon yarn
bCarbon-based coatings were mixed with 2.5% IL
cPEDOT:PSS-based coatings were mixed with 6.25% PDMS and 1% CNT
Fig. 3Microscopic images of dry textile electrodes. a FS structure. b FC structure. c FS structure with carbon + 2.5%IL coating. d FC structure with carbon + 2.5%IL coating
Fig. 4Microscopic images of textile electrodes. a RS structure. b RC structure. c FS structure with carbon coating. d FC structure with carbon coating. e FS structure with carbon + 5%IL coating. f FC structure with carbon + 5%IL coating. g FS structure with carbon + 7.5%IL coating. h FC structure with carbon + 7.5%IL coating
Fig. 5The agar–electrode impedance of textile electrodes. a FS structure with various conductive coating materials in the frequency range of 1–10,000 Hz. b FC structure with various conductive coating materials in the frequency range of 1–10,000 Hz. c FS structure with PEDOT:PSS-contained coating in the frequency of 5 Hz. The pressure was 20 mmHg (~ 2.66 kPa). d Wet gel electrode in the frequency range of 1–10,000 Hz
Fig. 6The agar–electrode impedance of dry textile electrodes. Different conductive substrates (silver and carbon) and knitted structures (flat and raised 3D) at low frequency (a 5 Hz) and high frequency (b 1 kHz)
Fig. 7Agar–electrode impedance of dry textile electrodes. FS structure at the pressures of 10 mmHg, 20 mmHg, and 30 mmHg (~ 1.33 kPa, ~ 2.66 kPa, and 3.99 kPa, respectively). The frequency was at 5 Hz
Fig. 8Long-term impedance stability. a Dry textile electrodes with various coatings and substrates and b zoom-in of PEDOT:PSS-contained electrodes. The pressure was 20 mmHg (~ 2.66 kPa)
Fig. 9ECG measurement. a ECG measurement setup (i) and photo of electrodes adhered to the skin (ii). Data of ECG monitoring using b gel electrode, c dry textile electrode in FS structure with carbon + 7.5% IL coating. d Dry textile electrode in FS structure with PEDOT: PSS + 12.5% (PDMS + 1% CNT) coating. e Dry textile electrode in FC structure with carbon + 7.5% IL coating. f Dry textile electrode in FC structure with carbon coating
Fig. 10ECG signals quality metrics for dry textile electrodes. Different knitted structures and conductive coating materials