Publication | Open Access
Strain-Insensitive Elastic Surface Electromyographic (sEMG) Electrode for Efficient Recognition of Exercise Intensities
22
Citations
37
References
2020
Year
Medical ElectronicsEngineeringWearable TechnologyWearable SensorsBiomedical EngineeringFlexible SensorEfficient RecognitionElectrophysiological EvaluationKinesiologySoft RoboticsApplied PhysiologySkin-electrode InterfaceExercise IntensitiesLow ConductivityHealth SciencesElectroactive MaterialElectrical EngineeringSurface ElectromyographyWearable ElectronicsBiomedical SensorsFlexible ElectronicsBioelectronicsElectromyographyElectrophysiologyHuman SkinWearable Biosensors
Surface electromyography (sEMG) sensors are widely used in the fields of ergonomics, sports science, and medical research. However, current sEMG sensors cannot recognize the various exercise intensities efficiently because of the strain interference, low conductivity, and poor skin-conformability of their electrodes. Here, we present a highly conductive, strain-insensitive, and low electrode-skin impedance elastic sEMG electrode, which consists of a three-layered structure (polydimethylsiloxane/galinstan + polydimethylsiloxane/silver-coated nickel + polydimethylsiloxane). The bottom layer of the electrode consists of vertically conductive magnetic particle paths, which are insensitive to stretching strain, collect sEMG charge from human skin, and finally transfer it to processing circuits via an intermediate layer. Our skin-friendly electrode exhibits high conductivity (0.237 and 1.635 mΩ.cm resistivities in transverse and longitudinal directions, respectively), low electrode-skin impedance (47.23 kΩ at 150 Hz), excellent strain-insensitivity (10% change of electrode-skin impedance within the 0%-25% strain range), high fatigue resistance (>1500 cycles), and good conformability with skin. During various exercise intensities, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of our electrode increased by 22.53 dB, which is 206% and 330% more than that of traditional Ag/AgCl and copper electrode, respectively. The ability of our electrode to efficiently recognize various exercise intensities confirms its great application potential for the field of sports health.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1