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A CMOS Integrated Sweat Monitoring System for Medical Applications | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

A CMOS Integrated Sweat Monitoring System for Medical Applications


Abstract:

Recently, demand for sweat measuring sensors has been increasing, especially for detection of heat stroke, dehydration and pathology of neurological diseases. Currently c...Show More

Abstract:

Recently, demand for sweat measuring sensors has been increasing, especially for detection of heat stroke, dehydration and pathology of neurological diseases. Currently commercially available sensors are immobile, as they are large and require cables and hoses. Previous studies have presented a design that combines a custom chip analog to digital converter (ADC), discrete capacitive humidity and thermal sensors in a single board. In addition to the ADC, this study integrates a thermal sensor and a time to digital converter (TDC) into a chip. We evaluated the custom chip by comparing the readings of our chip with the market available discrete chip of ADT-7410 inside a environment chamber. Our custom chip size is 2.6 mm2 with a 0.18 \mum CMOS process including TDC and thermal sensor. Our system produces results comparable to those of a commercially available system, while being much smaller.
Date of Conference: 06-08 March 2019
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 23 May 2019
ISBN Information:
Conference Location: Higashi-Hiroshima, Japan
References is not available for this document.

I. Introduction

Monitoring human sweat in daily life attracts attention nowadays because human sweat includes a lot of information, for example neuropathy, heatstroke, dehydration, etc [1, 2] . To measure human sweat, a humidity sensor is needed. There are two types of humidity sensors: resistor-type and capacitor-type. A resistor-type humidity sensor typically has a small size but its accuracy is not enough for monitoring human sweat. Therefore, we propose a human sweat monitoring system based on capacitor-type humidity sensor for wearable applications. This system is based on the first proto-type design of human sweat monitoring system presented in [3, 4] , which achieves a compact size with equivalent accuracy compared to the conventional sweat sensor of SKN-2000 [5]. However, the last design of monitoring system did not integrate time-to-digital converter (TDC) nor a thermal-sensor since it was just the first proto-type. Thus, the previous design requires off-chip TDC and thermos sensor which are realized on a FPGA board.

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1.
J. Clerk Maxwell, A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, Oxford: Clarendon, vol. 2, pp. 68-73, 1892.
2.
Q. Gao et al., Nature 529, vol. 509, 2016.
3.
Y. Mitani et al., Ext. Abst. SSDM2017, vol. 261, 2017.
4.
Y. Mitani et al., JJAP, vol. 57, pp. 04FF10, 2018.
5.
H. Momose et al., IEICE Tech. Report MBE2008-39, vol. 69, 2008.
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References

References is not available for this document.