Surface biopotentials collected from the human epidermis contain important information about human physiology, such as muscular, heart, and brain activities. However, commercially available wearable biomonitoring devices are generally composed of rigid hardware incompatible with the mechanical compliance of soft human tissues. Thin-film stretchable e-skin circuits that can interface the human skin represent an excellent alternative for long-term wearable biomonitoring. Here, a series of soft and stretchable electrodes are evaluated for their applicability in biopotential sensing. This includes conductive composites made of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) as a base substrate and conductive particles, i.e., carbon (cPDMS), silver (AgPDMS), anisotropic z-axis conductors made with silver-coated nickel particles (zPDMS), as well as a combination of a conductive tough hydrogel with PDMS, and finally ultrathin tattoo-like adhesive poly(vinyl alcohol)-coated films with stretchable biphasic Ag-EGaIn electrodes. These electrodes are compared between themselves and against the gold-standard Ag/AgCl and stainless steel electrodes, in order to assess relative performance in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) during electrocardiography, and electrode-skin impedance for a range of frequencies. Results show a direct relation between conformity of the electrode-skin interface and the SNR value. An all-integrated biomonitoring patch with embedded processing and communication electronics, hydrogel electrodes, and a multilayer liquid metal circuit is presented for electromyography.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adhm.201900234DOI Listing

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