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Biocompatible gel-free coconut oil and carbon black electrodes for ECG and respiration measurements

journal contribution
posted on 2023-11-22, 14:24 authored by Leonardo Garcia-GarciaLeonardo Garcia-Garcia, Alexander JohnsonAlexander Johnson, Paul M Kreitmair, Don Pasindu Vijai Lugoda, Arash Pour Yazdan Panah Kermani, Daniel RoggenDaniel Roggen, Niko Munzenrieder
The current state of the art in telemedicine has increased the interest in long-term monitoring of physiological and bioelectric signals. This motivated the development of materials and techniques for the fabrication of biocompatible, user, and environmentally friendly alternatives to conventional resistive wet electrodes. Here, we report a method for the fabrication of dry flexible and stretchable electrodes based on coconut oil (CNO) and carbon black (CB) for the monitoring of electrophysiological signals without conductive gels. The highly stretchable material shows a specific resistance ρ down to 33.2± 12.3 Ωm, high conformability, and a stretchability up to 1500%. The epidermal electrodes were used to record electrocardiographic (ECG) signals and measure respiration in a three-lead configuration and compared with commercial wet electrodes. Even after being elongated by 100% for 100 stretch/release cycles, a reliable recording of the QRS complex is demonstrated without the need for any contact enhancer or substances that cause skin reaction, demonstrating the potential use of this material for long-term ECG monitoring applications.

Funding

Shape sensing textile for orthotics - SmartSensOtics : EPSRC-ENGINEERING & PHYSICAL SCIENCES RESEARCH COUNCIL | EP/R013837/1

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

IEEE Sensors Journal

ISSN

1530-437X

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Issue

20

Volume

23

Page range

23980-23987

Department affiliated with

  • Engineering and Design Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes