Hydrogel electrodes with conductive and substrate-adhesive layers for noninvasive long-term EEG acquisition
TL;DR: In this paper , a semidry double-layer hydrogel electrode was developed to record EEG signals at a resolution comparable to that of wet electrodes and is also able to withstand up to 12 hours of continuous EEG acquisition.
read more
Abstract: Abstract Noninvasive brain–computer interfaces (BCIs) show great potential in applications including sleep monitoring, fatigue alerts, neurofeedback training, etc. While noninvasive BCIs do not impose any procedural risk to users (as opposed to invasive BCIs), the acquisition of high-quality electroencephalograms (EEGs) in the long term has been challenging due to the limitations of current electrodes. Herein, we developed a semidry double-layer hydrogel electrode that not only records EEG signals at a resolution comparable to that of wet electrodes but is also able to withstand up to 12 h of continuous EEG acquisition. The electrode comprises dual hydrogel layers: a conductive layer that features high conductivity, low skin-contact impedance, and high robustness; and an adhesive layer that can bond to glass or plastic substrates to reduce motion artifacts in wearing conditions. Water retention in the hydrogel is stable, and the measured skin-contact impedance of the hydrogel electrode is comparable to that of wet electrodes (conductive paste) and drastically lower than that of dry electrodes (metal pin). Cytotoxicity and skin irritation tests show that the hydrogel electrode has excellent biocompatibility. Finally, the developed hydrogel electrode was evaluated in both N170 and P300 event-related potential (ERP) tests on human volunteers. The hydrogel electrode captured the expected ERP waveforms in both the N170 and P300 tests, showing similarities in the waveforms generated by wet electrodes. In contrast, dry electrodes fail to detect the triggered potential due to low signal quality. In addition, our hydrogel electrode can acquire EEG for up to 12 h and is ready for recycled use (7-day tests). Altogether, the results suggest that our semidry double-layer hydrogel electrodes are able to detect ERPs in the long term in an easy-to-use fashion, potentially opening up numerous applications in real-life scenarios for noninvasive BCI.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
A 10-micrometer-thick nanomesh-reinforced gas-permeable hydrogel skin sensor for long-term electrophysiological monitoring
Zong-Wei Zhang,Jiawei Yang,Haoyang Wang,Chunya Wang,Yuheng Gu,Yumiao Xu,Sunghoon Lee,Tomoyuki Yokota,Hossam Haick,Takao Someya,Yan Wang +10 more
TL;DR: This research presents a ~10-micrometer-thick polyurethane nanomesh–reinforced gas-permeable hydrogel sensor that can self-adhere to the human skin for continuous and high-quality electrophysiological monitoring for 8 days under daily life conditions.
55
3D Printed Implantable Hydrogel Bioelectronics for Electrophysiological Monitoring and Electrical Modulation
Fucheng Wang,Yu Xue,Xingmei Chen,Pei Zhang,Liangjie Shan,Qingfang Duan,Junfei Xing,Yang Lan,Baoyang Lu,Ji Liu +9 more
TL;DR: Electro‐physiological studies rat heart models with normal or arrhythmic conditions highlight the capabilities of establishing conformal biointerface with the dynamic organs, allowing for long‐term and high‐precision spatiotemporary epicardial electrophysiological monitoring, as well as electrical modulation of acute myocardial infarction (MI) model.
43
Hydrogel sensors for biomedical electronics
Botao Liu,Jiangfang Lian,Xiang Wu,Mingming Hao +3 more
TL;DR: Hydrogel sensors for biomedical electronics offer flexible, programmable structures and functions, but face challenges such as low sensitivity and high impedance, hindering their ability to detect subtle movements and transmit signals effectively.
36
Research progress on the application of inkjet printing technology combined with hydrogels
Yuyao Wu,Yanzhen Zhang,Mingyu Yan,Guofang Hu,Zihao Li,Xiaolong Wang,Aibaibu Abulimit,Runsheng Li +7 more
TL;DR: This review integrates inkjet printing technology with hydrogel materials, highlighting their synergistic potential in precise tissue construction, biochips, and various applications, including particle delivery, flexible circuits, and bioengineering, with future directions for cohesive development.
22
Material and structural considerations for high-performance electrodes for wearable skin devices
Kyeonghee Lim,Hunkyu Seo,Won Gi Chung,Hayoung Song,Myoungjae Oh,Seoung Young Ryu,Younhee Kim +6 more
TL;DR: Researchers optimize wearable skin device electrodes by considering mechanical, electrical, and biocompatible factors, proposing flexible materials, hybrid structures, and AI integration for high-performance wearable skin devices with enhanced functionality and safety.
19
References
Tough bonding of hydrogels to diverse non-porous surfaces
TL;DR: A strategy to design tough transparent and conductive bonding of synthetic hydrogels containing 90% water to non-porous surfaces of diverse solids, including glass, silicon, ceramics, titanium and aluminium is reported.
Stretchable Conductive Polymers and Composites Based on PEDOT and PEDOT:PSS.
Laure V. Kayser,Darren J. Lipomi +1 more
TL;DR: These strategies include blending with plasticizers or polymers, deposition on elastomers, formation of fibers and gels, and the use of intrinsically stretchable scaffolds for the polymerization of PEDOT.
864
Skin-inspired hydrogel-elastomer hybrids with robust interfaces and functional microstructures
TL;DR: Zhao et al. as discussed by the authors proposed a simple yet versatile method to assemble hydrogels and elastomers into hybrids with extremely robust interfaces (interfacial toughness over 1,000 Jm−2) and functional microstructures such as microfluidic channels and electrical circuits.
841
Pure PEDOT:PSS hydrogels
TL;DR: It is shown that designing interconnected networks of PEDOT:PSS nanofibrils via a simple method can yield high-performance pure PEDots that exhibit superior mechanical and electrical properties, stability, and tunable swelling.
A direct comparison of wet, dry and insulating bioelectric recording electrodes.
A. Searle,Les Kirkup +1 more
TL;DR: A quantitative comparison of three types of bioelectrode (wet, dry and insulating) based on tests involving electrode impedance, static interference and motion artefact induced by various means indicates that in many situations the performance of dry andinsulating electrodes compares favourably with wet electrodes.
742