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Two‐Layered and Stretchable e‐Textile Patches for Wearable Healthcare Electronics
Author(s) -
La ThanhGiang,
Qiu Shide,
Scott Dylan K.,
Bakhtiari Reyhaneh,
Kuziek Jonathan W. P.,
Mathewson Kyle E.,
Rieger Jana,
Chung HyunJoong
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
advanced healthcare materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.288
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 2192-2659
pISSN - 2192-2640
DOI - 10.1002/adhm.201801033
Subject(s) - materials science , textile , electronics , inkwell , wearable technology , wearable computer , electrode , substrate (aquarium) , flexible electronics , layer (electronics) , nanotechnology , weaving , composite material , computer science , electrical engineering , engineering , embedded system , chemistry , oceanography , geology
Wearable healthcare systems require skin‐adhering electrodes that allow maximal comfort for patients as well as an electronics system to enable signal processing and transmittance. Textile‐based electronics, known as “e‐textiles,” is a platform technology that allows comfort for patients. Here, two‐layered e‐textile patches are designed by controlled permeation of Ag‐particle/fluoropolymer composite ink into a porous textile. The permeated ink forms a cladding onto the nanofibers in the textile substrate, which is beneficial for mechanical and electrical properties of the e‐textile. The printed e‐textile features conductivity of ≈3200 S cm −1 , whereas 1000 cycles of 30% uniaxial stretching causes the resistance to increase only by a factor of ≈5, which is acceptable in many applications. Controlling over the penetration depth enables a two‐layer design of the e‐textile, where the sensing electrodes and the conducting traces are printed in the opposite sides of the substrate. The formation of vertical interconnected access is remarkably simple as an injection from a syringe. With the custom‐developed electronic circuits, a surface electromyography system with wireless data transmission is demonstrated. Furthermore, the dry e‐textile patch collects electroencephalography with comparable signal quality to commercial gel electrodes. It is anticipated that the two‐layered e‐textiles will be effective in healthcare and sports applications.

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