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Wearable Carbon Nanotube‐Spandex Textile Yarns for Knee Flexion Monitoring

Version 2 2024-05-30, 23:44
Version 1 2024-02-05, 22:32
journal contribution
posted on 2024-05-30, 23:44 authored by Cormac D Fay, Nicholas Mannering, Ali Jeiranikhameneh, Fatemeh Mokhtari, Javad Foroughi, Ray H Baughman, Peter FM Choong, Gordon G Wallace
AbstractCarbon nanotube‐spandex textiles are rapidly gaining in popularity as sensors for human motion, yet their use as—and comparison to—viable clinical‐based instrumentation has not been thoroughly investigated. Herein, the use of novel yarn‐based sensors that show excellent characteristics, ideal for joint kinematic sensing, is described. Knee kinematic monitoring of nine healthy participants while walking on a treadmill is examined. This is enabled through a 3D‐printed knee brace integrated with a wireless transmission device. The design, development, and testing of the wearable device is presented along with wireless data capture and processing. Additionally, the findings are compared in vivo to those reported by a reference optoelectronic measurement system (KneeKG) for validation purposes. The results show a high correlation between both systems, with an average Pearson's r‐value of 0.89 across each corresponding knee. This study is the first to explore the use of these novel yarn sensors for sagittal knee kinematic monitoring on participants during trials and validate the findings via an optoelectronic measurement system.

History

Journal

Advanced Sensor Research

Volume

2

Pagination

1-10

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

2751-1219

eISSN

2751-1219

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Wiley

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