Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Use of EMFi as a Blood Pressure Pulse Transducer

50

Citations

31

References

2005

Year

Abstract

This paper describes and tests two prototype series of pressure transducer arrays based on electromechanical film (EMFi). By offering high (/spl sim/T/spl Omega/) resistance, EMFi is an excellent material for low-current long-term measurement applications. About 50 transducer arrays were designed and tested using different configurations and electrode materials to sense low-frequency pressure pulsations on the radial artery in the wrist. Essential requirements included an adequate linear response in the desired temperature range and uniform quality. Transducer sensitivity was tested as a function of temperature in the range of 25/spl deg/C-45/spl deg/C at varying dc and ac pressures. The average sensitivity of the EMFi used in the transducers proved adequate (/spl sim/2.2mV/mmHg and /spl sim/7 mV/mmHg for normal and high-sensitive films) for the intended purpose. Moreover, EMFi's spectral response covered the required range for biomedical applications, but it was unable to measure static pressure (f/sub 3 dB//spl ap/38 /spl mu/Hz). The sensitivity of the EMFi material was sufficiently constant for measuring blood pressure pulses in the desired range (0-300 mmHg), and the best achieved deviation in sensitivity was /spl plusmn/5.1%. It was also established that in addition to sensitivity and its standard deviation, crosstalk between electrode elements also depends strongly on electrode thickness.

References

YearCitations

Page 1