Textile-Friendly Interconnection between Wearable Measurement Instrumentation and Sensorized Garments-Initial Performance Evaluation for Electrocardiogram Recordings
Journal article, 2019

The interconnection between hard electronics and soft textiles remains a noteworthy challenge in regard to the mass production of textile-electronic integrated products such as sensorized garments. The current solutions for this challenge usually have problems with size, flexibility, cost, or complexity of assembly. In this paper, we present a solution with a stretchable and conductive carbon nanotube (CNT)-based paste for screen printing on a textile substrate to produce interconnectors between electronic instrumentation and a sensorized garment. The prototype connectors were evaluated via electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings using a sensorized textile with integrated textile electrodes. The ECG recordings obtained using the connectors were evaluated for signal quality and heart rate detection performance in comparison to ECG recordings obtained with standard pre-gelled Ag/AgCl electrodes and direct cable connection to the ECG amplifier. The results suggest that the ECG recordings obtained with the CNT paste connector are of equivalent quality to those recorded using a silver paste connector or a direct cable and are suitable for the purpose of heart rate detection.

wearable technology

textile-electronic integration

conductive polymers

smart textiles

Author

Fernando Seoane

University of Borås

Karolinska University Hospital

Karolinska Institutet

Azadeh Soroudi

University of Borås

Ke Lu

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Signal Processing and Biomedical Engineering

David Nilsson

RISE Research Institutes of Sweden

Marie Nilsson

RISE Research Institutes of Sweden

Farhad Abtahi

Karolinska Institutet

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Mikael Skrifvars

University of Borås

Sensors

14248220 (eISSN)

Vol. 19 20 4426

Subject Categories

Medical Laboratory and Measurements Technologies

Other Medical Engineering

Textile, Rubber and Polymeric Materials

DOI

10.3390/s19204426

PubMed

31614859

More information

Latest update

10/10/2022