Carbon nanofiber-filled conductive silicone elastomers as soft, dry bioelectronic interfaces
G. A. Slipher, W. D. Hairston, R. A. Mrozek

TL;DR
This study develops a carbon nanofiber-filled silicone elastomer for dry, soft EEG electrodes that maintain stable electrical impedance under deformation, enabling reliable brain signal recording in real-world conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a conductive elastomer with flat impedance response to deformation, suitable for comfortable, dry EEG interfaces in practical environments.
Findings
Higher filler ratios improve impedance stability under deformation.
Impedance can be tuned over four orders of magnitude.
Material stiffness increases with filler content.
Abstract
Soft and pliable conductive polymer composites hold promise for application as bioelectronic interfaces such as for electroencephalography (EEG). In clinical, laboratory, and real-world EEG there is a desire for dry, soft, and comfortable interfaces to the scalp that are capable of relaying the microvolt-level scalp potentials to signal processing electronics. A key challenge is that most material approaches are sensitive to deformation-induced shifts in electrical impedance associated with decreased signal-to-noise ratio. This is a particular concern in real-world environments where human motion is present. The entire set of brain information outside of tightly controlled laboratory or clinical settings are currently unobtainable due to this challenge. Here we explore the performance of an elastomeric material solution purposefully designed for dry, soft, comfortable scalp contact…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials · Conducting polymers and applications · Neuroscience and Neural Engineering
