This study involved fabricating barbed microtip-based electrode arrays by using silicon wet etching. KOH anisotropic wet etching was employed to form a standard pyramidal microtip array and HF/HNO3 isotropic etching was used to fabricate barbs on these microtips. To improve the electrical conductance between the tip array on the front side of the wafer and the electrical contact on the back side, a through-silicon via was created during the wet etching process. The experimental results show that the forces required to detach the barbed microtip arrays from human skin, a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS polymer, and a polyvinylchloride (PVC film were larger compared with those required to detach microtip arrays that lacked barbs. The impedances of the skin-electrode interface were measured and the performance levels of the proposed dry electrode were characterized. Electrode prototypes that employed the proposed tip arrays were implemented. Electroencephalogram (EEG and electrocardiography (ECG recordings using these electrode prototypes were also demonstrated. © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
CITATION STYLE
Hsu, L. S., Tung, S. W., Kuo, C. H., & Yang, Y. J. (2014). Developing barbed microtip-based electrode arrays for biopotential measurement. Sensors (Switzerland), 14(7), 12370–12386. https://doi.org/10.3390/s140712370
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