4.7 Article

Rapid and Scalable Fabrication of Low Impedance, 3D Dry Electrodes for Physiological Sensing

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS TECHNOLOGIES
Volume 7, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/admt.202200342

Keywords

3D printing; electrocardiography; electroencephalography; electroless plating; electrophysiological sensors; medical devices; prosthetics

Funding

  1. NIH [U01 EB029427]
  2. Bakar Fellows Fund
  3. NSF [DGE 2146752]
  4. Berkeley Wireless Research Center
  5. Cortera Neurotechnologies

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A method for producing low impedance dry electrodes without the need for hydrogels is presented. The electrodes are optimized for individual use using electroless copper and gold plating with 3D printing. Compared to clinical-standard devices, these dry electrodes exhibit good electrical performance and comfort.
Medical electrophysiological sensors that can study the body and diagnose diseases depend on consistently low impedance electrode-skin interfaces. Clinical-standard wet electrodes use hydrogels and skin abrasion to improve the interface and thus the recorded signal quality. These electrodes are challenging to self-administer and impede in-home care. Wearable dry electrodes are more practical; however, they show higher impedances than wet electrodes and are costly to customize. This work presents a fabrication method for rapidly producing low impedance, anatomically fit dry electrodes that do not require hydrogels. By using electroless copper and gold plating with 3D printing, biocompatible electrodes can be optimized for individuals at a fraction of the cost of existing vacuum deposition-based techniques. Example 3D dry electrodes made with this process are evaluated alongside clinical-standard devices in typical scenarios to compare electrical performance and comfort. The resulting dry electrodes exhibit an average electrode-skin impedance of 66.7 k omega at 50 Hz and DC offset of -20 mV without any hydrogel, which, when area normalized, is within the range achieved by wet electrodes without skin abrasion.

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