A woven electrode with convex structure for electrical impedance tomography

2021 ◽  
pp. 004051752110471
Author(s):  
Xi Zhang ◽  
Yueqi Zhong ◽  
Qi Wang ◽  
Chang Dou

We developed a silver/silver chloride (Ag/AgCl) woven electrode, which was woven in a convex high-density structure. The convex structure can decrease the motion artifacts caused by the slippage between human skin and the electrode. The high density can reduce the noise caused by the change of contact resistance. The model of the electrode–skin interface was proposed, and its equivalent circuit model was built, which can present an intuitive understanding of electrode design principles. Furthermore, AgCl particles were electrochemically deposited on the Ag electrode in terms of 23 schemes to optimize the deposition uniformity. The effects of deposition time, electrolyte concentration, and current/voltage magnitude were investigated. According to the result, the best combination is a constant current method, with the current at 0.01 A, the deposition time set to 300 s, and the electrolyte concentration as 0.05 M. The resistances of the deposited electrodes are qualified for impedance monitoring due to their small resistance. A bioimpedance system was assembled followed by the electrical impedance tomography mechanism. The frequency response and bioimpedance–time relationship were measured and analyzed in our bioimpedance system. The result reveals that the frequency response from [Formula: see text] to[Formula: see text] Hz presents a stable state for the convex woven electrode. The woven electrode system has a wider stable frequency band than the wet electrode. The bioimpedance of wet electrodes is stable in the initial time, whereas that of woven electrodes decreases with time. However, the wet electrode bioimpedance increases with time after 3 h, and the woven electrode bioimpedance is stable after 3 h. Both the interface capacitance and resistance have very important roles in the bioimpedance system. The woven electrode is better in long-term monitoring than the wet electrode. In addition, convex electrode bioimpedance presents less noise than the plain electrode. Therefore, the convex electrode is the best choice for the bioimpedance monitoring system.

2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (9) ◽  
pp. 688-695
Author(s):  
Ramesh Kumar ◽  
Sharvan Kumar ◽  
A. Sengupta

This paper proposed an advanced digital voltage-controlled multi-frequency based constant current source, which is a wide range of loads and high SNR ratio for Electrical Impedance Tomography (EIT) application. In EIT a constant current source is required for injecting a sinusoidal current pulse to the phantom boundary. The boundary potentials are measured by inserting content current from the phantom boundary according to the variation in frequency and current levels. For studying the wide range of tissue conductivity among different type of subjects (the multi-frequency scanning) is desired in medical Electrical impedance tomography. The proposed Current source, which shows that the simulation has good performance at multi-frequency range with accuracy and stability. In proteus simulation software, the results show that the proposed circuit presents a more stable impedance output and the obtained boundary data at multi-frequency for the validation of the obtained data has been shown using suitable image reconstruction algorithm and is found suitable for image reconstruction much easier.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 125
Author(s):  
Endarko Endarko ◽  
Ari Bangkit Sanjaya Umbu

Electrical impedance tomography is a non-invasive imaging modality that uses the electrical conductivity distribution to reconstruct images based on potential measurements from the object's surface. The proposed study was to design and fabricate a low-cost and simple reconstruction method for 3D electrical impedance tomography imaging. In this study, we have been successfully developed 3 Dimensional Electrical Impedance Tomography (3D-EIT) system using 16 copper electrodes (Cu) to detect and reconstruct the presence of objects in the Phantom. 3D-EIT was developed using Phantom as a test object with PVC pipe material, with an inner diameter of 7.2 cm and a height of 5.4 cm. Electrodes were arranged in two rings, with each ring having eight electrodes arranged in a planar line. Furthermore, the Gauss-Newton algorithm and Laplace prior regularization were used to image reconstruction of objects inside the Phantom using voltage measurement produced from sequential pairs of neighboring electrodes. The voltage is obtained from the injection of a constant current of 1 mA at 20 kHz into the system's electrode pairs. The objects used in this research are PVC pipe, solid aluminum, PVC pipes filled with wax glue, and copper trusses. The results obtained show that the reconstruction results can provide information about the position, the electrical properties, and the shape of real objects. Finally, the system can detect the location, height, and electrical properties of objects for all variations of angle and height variations.


Author(s):  
Bruno Furtado de Moura ◽  
francisco sepulveda ◽  
Jorge Luis Jorge Acevedo ◽  
Wellington Betencurte da Silva ◽  
Rogerio Ramos ◽  
...  

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