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Pure Conducting Polymer Hydrogels Increase Signal-to-Noise of Cutaneous Electrodes by Lowering Skin Interface Impedance.

Sebastian Roubert MartinezPaul Le FlochJia LiuRobert D Howe
Published in: Advanced healthcare materials (2023)
Cutaneous electrodes are routinely used for noninvasive electrophysiological sensing of signals from the brain, the heart, and the neuromuscular system. These bioelectronic signals propagate as ionic charge from their sources to the skin-electrode interface where they are then sensed as electronic charge by the instrumentation. However, these signals suffer from low signal-to-noise ratio arising from the high impedance at the tissue-to-electrode contact interface. This article reports that soft conductive polymer hydrogels made purely of PEDOT: PSS present nearly an order of magnitude decrease in the skin-electrode contact impedance (88%, 82%, and 77% at 10 Hz, 100 Hz, and 1 kHz, respectively) when compared to clinical electrodes in an ex-vivo model that isolates the bioelectrochemical features of a single skin-electrode contact. Integrating these pure soft conductive polymer blocks into an adhesive wearable sensor enables high fidelity bioelectronic signals with higher signal-to-noise ratio (average 2.1 dB increase, max 3.4 dB increase) when compared to clinical electrodes across all subjects. The utility of these electrodes is demonstrated in a neural interface application. The conductive polymer hydrogels enable electromyogram-based velocity-control of a robotic arm to complete a pick and place task. This work provides a basis for the characterization and use of conductive polymer hydrogels to better couple human and machine. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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