Contact-Free Biosignal Acquisition via Capacitive and Ultrasonic Sensors

Contact-free detection of human vital signs like heart rate and respiration rate will improve the patients' comfort and enables long-term monitoring of newborns or bedridden patients. For that, reliable and safe measurement techniques are indispensable. The aim of this work is the development a...

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Main Authors: Roman Kusche, Fabian John, Marco Cimdins, Horst Hellbruck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2020-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9097250/
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spelling doaj-a57fbdbb784640dcbf8b0e438b730a562021-03-30T01:58:47ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362020-01-018956299564110.1109/ACCESS.2020.29958619097250Contact-Free Biosignal Acquisition via Capacitive and Ultrasonic SensorsRoman Kusche0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2925-7638Fabian John1Marco Cimdins2Horst Hellbruck3Center of Excellence CoSA, Luebeck University of Applied Sciences, Lübeck, GermanyCenter of Excellence CoSA, Luebeck University of Applied Sciences, Lübeck, GermanyCenter of Excellence CoSA, Luebeck University of Applied Sciences, Lübeck, GermanyCenter of Excellence CoSA, Luebeck University of Applied Sciences, Lübeck, GermanyContact-free detection of human vital signs like heart rate and respiration rate will improve the patients' comfort and enables long-term monitoring of newborns or bedridden patients. For that, reliable and safe measurement techniques are indispensable. The aim of this work is the development and comparison of novel ultrasonic and capacitive measurement setups, sharing a common hardware platform. Both measurement techniques that are implemented and compared are based on the detection of minor chest wall vibrations in millimeter ranges, due to geometrical thorax changes during respiration and heartbeat activities. After examining the physical measurement conditions and simulating the capacitive sensor, a problem-specific measurement setup is proposed. The system is characterized to be capable of detecting distance changes below 2 μm via the ultrasonic sensor and below 800 μm via the capacitive sensor. First subject measurements show that the detection of heart activities is possible under ideal conditions and exclusively with the proposed ultrasonic approach. However, the capacitive sensor works reliably for respiration monitoring, even when the subject is fully-clothed and covered with a blanket. The chosen ultrasonic approach is sensitive regarding minor changes of the reflecting surface and therefore has high uncertainty. In contrast, capacitive respiration detection is very reliable. It is conceivable that improvements in the capacitive sensor circuitry will also enable the detection of heart activities. The proposed ultrasonic approach presents current problems of this technique. In contrast to that, the unusual approach of capacitive sensing demonstrates a high potential regarding vital signs acquisition.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9097250/Capacitive sensorcontact-freefinite element simulationheart rateI/Q demodulationrespiration rate
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roman Kusche
Fabian John
Marco Cimdins
Horst Hellbruck
spellingShingle Roman Kusche
Fabian John
Marco Cimdins
Horst Hellbruck
Contact-Free Biosignal Acquisition via Capacitive and Ultrasonic Sensors
IEEE Access
Capacitive sensor
contact-free
finite element simulation
heart rate
I/Q demodulation
respiration rate
author_facet Roman Kusche
Fabian John
Marco Cimdins
Horst Hellbruck
author_sort Roman Kusche
title Contact-Free Biosignal Acquisition via Capacitive and Ultrasonic Sensors
title_short Contact-Free Biosignal Acquisition via Capacitive and Ultrasonic Sensors
title_full Contact-Free Biosignal Acquisition via Capacitive and Ultrasonic Sensors
title_fullStr Contact-Free Biosignal Acquisition via Capacitive and Ultrasonic Sensors
title_full_unstemmed Contact-Free Biosignal Acquisition via Capacitive and Ultrasonic Sensors
title_sort contact-free biosignal acquisition via capacitive and ultrasonic sensors
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Contact-free detection of human vital signs like heart rate and respiration rate will improve the patients' comfort and enables long-term monitoring of newborns or bedridden patients. For that, reliable and safe measurement techniques are indispensable. The aim of this work is the development and comparison of novel ultrasonic and capacitive measurement setups, sharing a common hardware platform. Both measurement techniques that are implemented and compared are based on the detection of minor chest wall vibrations in millimeter ranges, due to geometrical thorax changes during respiration and heartbeat activities. After examining the physical measurement conditions and simulating the capacitive sensor, a problem-specific measurement setup is proposed. The system is characterized to be capable of detecting distance changes below 2 μm via the ultrasonic sensor and below 800 μm via the capacitive sensor. First subject measurements show that the detection of heart activities is possible under ideal conditions and exclusively with the proposed ultrasonic approach. However, the capacitive sensor works reliably for respiration monitoring, even when the subject is fully-clothed and covered with a blanket. The chosen ultrasonic approach is sensitive regarding minor changes of the reflecting surface and therefore has high uncertainty. In contrast, capacitive respiration detection is very reliable. It is conceivable that improvements in the capacitive sensor circuitry will also enable the detection of heart activities. The proposed ultrasonic approach presents current problems of this technique. In contrast to that, the unusual approach of capacitive sensing demonstrates a high potential regarding vital signs acquisition.
topic Capacitive sensor
contact-free
finite element simulation
heart rate
I/Q demodulation
respiration rate
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9097250/
work_keys_str_mv AT romankusche contactfreebiosignalacquisitionviacapacitiveandultrasonicsensors
AT fabianjohn contactfreebiosignalacquisitionviacapacitiveandultrasonicsensors
AT marcocimdins contactfreebiosignalacquisitionviacapacitiveandultrasonicsensors
AT horsthellbruck contactfreebiosignalacquisitionviacapacitiveandultrasonicsensors
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