6,554 research outputs found
Embroidered textile connectors for wearable systems
This thesis presents a novel textile microwave interconnect that can be easily attached and removed from textile devices. Interconnects perform a vital role in carrying RF signals between an amplifier and an antenna or other devices. Conventional interconnects used for interconnecting non-flexible circuits perform this function with very low losses, however the same is not true for transmission lines made on fabrics using conductive threads or inks. This scenario of using interconnects on fabric systems is challenging. Due to the necessity of washing fabrics, permanent attachments on the fabric have disadvantages. Theconnectionpresentedinthisthesisisdonewithoutanymetalor rigid parts on the textile devices side. The connector is held in place by magnets which are shown to have no negative impact on the microwave connection. Two models are then explored, a microstrip connector and a grounded coplanar waveguide (CPW) connector. A detailed study of the models was done and it was found that both models have reasonable results up to2GHz. The interconnects are fully characterized by de-embedding the connection part. This can be used to predict the effect the interconnect will have when used to connect a microwave equipment. The microstrip version of the interconnect is attached to an antenna and the results presented. The interconnect has no negative effect on the reflection coefficient measurement of the antenna. Repeatability tests were also performed with this model, with no visible change in the connection quality between measurements. Different embroidery patterns and stitching designs were also investigated. These are used to reduce the amount of conductive thread used up to 59% reduction in thread ammount. A wearable antenna was fully converted from rigid copper sheet to a full textile design
Dynamic Field Programmable Logic-Driven Soft Exosuit
The next generation of etextiles foresees an era of smart wearable garments
where embedded seamless intelligence provides the ability to sense, process and
perform. Core to this vision is embedded textile functionality enabling dynamic
configuration. In this paper we detail a methodology, design and implementation
of a dynamic field programmable logic-driven fabric soft exosuit. Dynamic field
programmability allows the soft exosuit to alter its functionality and adapt to
specific exercise programs depending on the wearers need. The dynamic field
programmability is enabled through motion based control arm movements of the
soft exosuit triggering momentary sensors embedded in the fabric exosuit at
specific joint placement points (right arm: wrist, elbow).The embedded
circuitry in the fabric exosuit is implemented using a layered and
interchangeable approach. This includes logic gate patches (AND,OR,NOT) and a
layered textile interconnection panel. This modular and interchangeable design
enhances the soft exosuits flexibility and adaptability. A truth table aligning
to a rehabilitation healthcare use case was utilised. Tests were completed
validating the field programmability of the soft exosuit and its capability to
switch between its embedded logic driven circuitry and its operational and
functionality options controlled by motion movement of the wearers right arm
(elbow and wrist). Iterative exercise movement and acceleration based tests
were completed to validate the functionality of the field programmable logic
driven fabric exosuit. We demonstrate a working soft exosuit prototype with
motion controlled operational functionality that can be applied to
rehabilitation applications.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figure
The future design direction of smart clothing development
Literature indicates that Smart Clothing applications, the next generation of clothing and
electronic products, have been struggling to enter the mass market because the consumers’
latent needs have not been recognised. Moreover, the design direction of Smart Clothes
remains unclear and unfocused. Nevertheless, a clear design direction is necessary for all
product development. Therefore, this research aims to identify the design directions of the
emerging Smart Clothes industry by conducting a questionnaire survey and focus groups
with its major design contributors. The results reveal that the current strategy of embedding
a wide range of electronic functions in a garment is not suitable. This is primarily because it
does not match the users’ requirements, purchasing criteria and lifestyle. The results
highlight the respondents’ preference for personal healthcare and sportswear applications
that suit their lifestyle, are aesthetically attractive, and provide a practical function
ICS Materials. Towards a re-Interpretation of material qualities through interactive, connected, and smart materials.
The domain of materials for design is changing under the influence of an increased technological
advancement, miniaturization and democratization. Materials are becoming connected,
augmented, computational, interactive, active, responsive, and dynamic. These are ICS
Materials, an acronym that stands for Interactive, Connected and Smart. While labs around the
world are experimenting with these new materials, there is the need to reflect on their
potentials and impact on design. This paper is a first step in this direction: to interpret and
describe the qualities of ICS materials, considering their experiential pattern, their expressive sensorial dimension, and their aesthetic of interaction. Through case studies, we analyse and classify these emerging ICS Materials and identified common characteristics, and challenges, e.g. the ability to change over time or their programmability by the designers and users. On that basis, we argue there is the need to reframe and redesign existing models to describe ICS materials, making their qualities emerge
Proetex: protective e-textiles to enhance the safety of emergency/disaster operators: current state of the projects' achievements
Proetex is a European Integrated Project dedicated to the realization of a micro- and nano-technology-based wearable equipment for emergency operators. During the first 3 years of work, two different and progressively improved versions of a complete “smart” uniform for fire-fighters and emergency rescuers have been realized. These garments aim at monitoring both physiological parameters, position and posture of the operators and the presence of external potential sources of danger and to send these data to a remote coordinating unit. In the following, the main issues of the design and realization will be described and discussed
Development of Textile Antennas for Energy Harvesting
The current socio-economic developments and lifestyle trends indicate an increasing
consumption of technological products and processes, powered by emergent concepts, such as
Internet of Things (IoT) and smart environments, where everything is connected in a single
network. For this reason, wearable technology has been addressed to make the person, mainly
through his clothes, able to communicate with and be part of this technological network.
Wireless communication systems are made up of several electronic components, which over
the years have been miniaturized and made more flexible, such as batteries, sensors, actuators,
data processing units, interconnectors and antennas. Turning these systems into wearable
systems is a demanding research subject. Specifically, the development of wearable antennas
has been challenging, because they are conventionally built on rigid substrates, hindering their
integration into the garment. That is why, considering the flexibility and the dielectric
properties of textile materials, making antennas in textile materials will allow expanding the
interaction of the user with some electronic devices, by interacting through the clothes. The
electronic devices may thus become less invasive and more discrete.
Textile antennas combine the traditional textile materials with new technologies. They emerge
as a potential interface of the human-technology-environment relationship. They are becoming
an active part in the wireless communication systems, aiming applications such as tracking and
navigation, mobile computing, health monitoring and others. Moreover, wearable antennas
have to be thin, lightweight, of easy maintenance, robust, and of low cost for mass production
and commercialization.
In this way, planar antennas, the microstrip patch type, have been proposed for garment
applications, because this type of antenna presents all these characteristics, and are also
adaptable to any surface. Such antennas are usually formed by assembling conductive (patch
and ground plane) and dielectric (substrate) layers. Furthermore, the microstrip patch
antennas, radiate perpendicularly to a ground plane, which shields the antenna radiation,
ensuring that the human body is exposed only to a very small fraction of the radiation.
To develop this type of antenna, the knowledge of the properties of textile materials is crucial
as well as the knowledge of the manufacturing techniques for connecting the layers with glue,
seam, adhesive sheets and others. Several properties of the materials influence the behaviour
of the antenna. For instance, the bandwidth and the efficiency of a planar antenna are mainly
determined by the permittivity and the thickness of the substrate. The use of textiles in
wearable antennas requires thus the characterization of their properties. Specific electrical
conductive textiles are available on the market and have been successfully used. Ordinary
textile fabrics have been used as substrates. In general, textiles present a very low dielectric constant, εr, that reduces the surface wave
losses and increases the impedance bandwidth of the antenna. However, textile materials are
constantly exchanging water molecules with the surroundings, which affects their
electromagnetic properties. In addition, textile fabrics are porous, anisotropic and
compressible materials whose thickness and density might change with low pressures.
Therefore, it is important to know how these characteristics influence the behaviour of the
antenna in order to minimize unwanted effects.
To explain some influences of the textile material on the performance of the wearable
antennas, this PhD Thesis starts presenting a survey of the key points for the design and
development of textile antennas, from the choice of the textile materials to the framing of the
antenna. An analysis of the textile materials that have been used is also presented. Further,
manufacturing techniques of the textile antennas are described.
The accurate characterization of textile materials to use as a dielectric substrate in wearable
systems is fundamental. However, little information can be found on the electromagnetic
properties of the regular textiles. Woven, knits and nonwovens are inhomogeneous, highly
porous, compressible and easily influenced by the environmental hygrometric conditions,
making their electromagnetic characterization difficult. Despite there are no standard
methods, several authors have been adapting techniques for the dielectric characterization of
textiles. This PhD Thesis focuses on the dielectric characterization of the textile materials,
surveying the resonant and non-resonant methods that have been proposed to characterize the
textile and leather materials. Also, this PhD Thesis summarizes the characterization of textile
materials made through these methods, which were validated by testing antennas that
performed well.
Further a Resonant-Based Experimental Technique is presented. This new method is based on
the theory of resonance-perturbation, extracting the permittivity and loss tangent values based
on the shifts caused by the introduction of a superstrate on the patch of a microstrip antenna.
The results obtained using this method have shown that when positioning the roughest face of
the material under test (MUT) in contact with the resonator board, the extracted dielectric
constant value is lower than the one extracted with this face positioned upside-down. Based
on this observation, superficial properties of textiles were investigated and their influence on
the performance of antennas was analysed.
Thus, this PhD Thesis relates the results of the dielectric characterization to some structural
parameters of textiles, such as surface roughness, superficial and bulk porosities. The results
show that both roughness and superficial porosity of the samples influence the measurements,
through the positioning of the probes. Further, the influence of the positioning of the dielectric
material on the performance of textile microstrip antennas was analysed. For this, twelve
prototypes of microstrip patch antennas were developed and tested. The results show that,
despite the differences obtained on the characterization when placing the face or reverse-sides of the MUT in contact with the resonator board, the obtained average result of εr is well suited
to design antennas ensuring a good performance.
According to the European Commission Report in 2009, “Internet of Things — An action plan for
Europe”, in the next years, the IoT will be able to improve the quality of life, especially in the
health monitoring field. In the Wireless Body Sensor Network (WBSN) context, the integration
of textile antennas for energy harvesting into smart clothing is a particularly interesting
solution for a continuous wirelessly feed of the devices. Indeed, in the context of wearable
devices the replacement of batteries is not easy to practice. A specific goal of this PhD Thesis
is thus to describe the concept of the energy harvesting and then presents a survey of textile
antennas for RF energy harvesting. Further, a dual-band printed monopole textile antenna for
electromagnetic energy harvesting, operating at GSM 900 and DCS 1800 bands, is also proposed.
The antenna aims to harvest energy to feed sensor nodes of a wearable health monitoring
system. The gains of the antenna are around 1.8 dBi and 2.06 dBi allied with a radiation
efficiency of 82% and 77.6% for the lowest and highest frequency bands, respectively.
To understand and improve the performance of the proposed printed monopole textile antenna,
several manufacturing techniques are tested through preliminary tests, to identify promising
techniques and to discard inefficient ones, such as the gluing technique. Then, the influence
of several parameters of the manufacturing techniques on the performance of the antenna are
analysed, such as the use of steam during lamination, the type of adhesive sheet, the
orientation of the conductive elements and others. For this, seven prototypes of the printed
monopole textile antenna were manufactured by laminating and embroidering techniques.
The measurement of the electrical surface resistance, Rs, has shown that the presence of the
adhesive sheet used on the laminating process may reduce the conductivity of the conductive
materials. Despite that, when measuring the return loss of printed monopole antennas
produced by lamination, the results show the antennas have a good performance. The results
also show that the orientation of the conductive fabric does not influence the performance of
the antennas. However, when testing embroidered antennas, the results show that the
direction and number of the stitches in the embroidery may influence the performance of the
antenna and should thus be considered during manufacturing.
The textile antennas perform well and their results support and give rise to the new concept
of a continuous substrate to improve the integration of textile antennas into clothing, in a more
comfortable and pleasure way. A demonstrating prototype, the E-Caption: Smart and
Sustainable Coat, is thus presented. In this prototype of smart coat, the printed antenna is fully
integrated, as its dielectric is the textile material composing the coat itself. The E-Caption
illustrates the innovative concept of textile antennas that can be manipulated as simple
emblems. The results obtained testing the antenna before and after its integration into cloth,
show that the integration does not affect the behaviour of the antenna. Even on the presence
of the human body the antenna is able to cover the proposed resonance frequencies (GSM 900
and DCS 1800 bands) with the radiation pattern still being omnidirectional. At last, the exponential growth in the wearable market boost the industrialization process of
manufacturing textile antennas. As this research shows, the patch of the antennas can be easily
and efficiently cut, embroidered or screen printed by industrial machines. However, the
conception of a good industrial substrate that meets all the mechanical and electromagnetic
requirements of textile antennas is still a challenge. Following the continuous substrate
concept presented and demonstrated through the E-Caption, a new concept is proposed: the
continuous Substrate Integrating the Ground Plane (SIGP). The SIGP is a novel textile material
that integrates the dielectric substrate and the conductive ground plane in a single material,
eliminating one laminating process. Three SIGP, that are weft knitted spacer fabrics having one
conductive face, were developed in partnership with the Borgstena Textile Portugal Lda,
creating synergy between research in the academy and industry. The results of testing the
performance of the SIGP materials show that the integration of the ground plane on the
substrate changes the dielectric constant of the material, as a consequence of varying the
thickness. Despite this, after the accurate dielectric and electrical characterization, the SIGP
I material has shown a good performance as dielectric substrate of a microstrip patch antenna
for RF energy harvesting. This result is very promising for boosting the industrial fabrication of
microstrip patch textile antennas and their mass production and dissemination into the IoT
network, guiding future developments of smart clothing and wearables.Os atuais desenvolvimentos socioeconómicos e tendências de estilo de vida apontam para um
crescimento do consumo de produtos e processos tecnológicos, impulsionado por conceitos
emergentes como a Internet das Coisas, onde tudo tudo está conectado em uma única rede.
Por esta razão, as tecnologias usáveis (wearable) estão a afirmar-se propondo soluções que
tornam o utilizador possivelmente através das suas roupas, capaz de comunicar com e fazer
parte desta rede.
Os sistemas de comunicações sem fios são constituídos por diversos componentes eletrónicos,
que com o passar dos anos foram sendo miniaturizados e fabricados em materiais flexíveis, tais
como as baterias, os sensores, as unidades de processamento de dados, as interconexões e as
antenas. Tornar os sistemas de comunicações sem fios em sistemas usáveis requer trabalho de
investigação exigente. Nomeadamente, o desenvolvimento de antenas usáveis tem sido um
desafio, devido às antenas serem tradicionalmente desenvolvidas em substratos rígidos, que
dificultam a sua integração no vestuário. Dessa forma, considerando a flexibilidade e as
propriedades dielétricas dos materiais têxteis, as antenas têxteis trazem a promessa de
permitir a interacção dos utilizadores com os dispositivos eletrónicos através da roupa,
tornando os dispositivos menos invasivos e mais discretos.
As antenas têxteis combinam os materiais têxteis tradicionais com novas tecnologias e emergem
assim como uma potencial interface de fronteira entre seres humanos-tecnologias-ambientes.
Expandindo assim a interação entre o utilizador e os dispositivos eletrónicos ao recurso do
vestuário. Assim, através das antenas têxteis, o vestuário torna-se uma parte ativa nos sistemas
de comunicação sem fios, visando aplicações como rastreamento e navegação, computação
móvel, monitorização de saúde, entre outros. Para isto, as antenas para vestir devem ser finas,
leves, de fácil manutenção, robustas e de baixo custo para produção em massa e
comercialização.
Desta forma, as antenas planares do tipo patch microstrip têm sido propostas para aplicações
em vestuário, pois apresentam todas estas características e também são adaptáveis a qualquer
superfície. Estas antenas são geralmente formadas pela sobreposição de camadas condutoras
(elemento radiante e plano de massa) e dielétricas (substrato). Além disso, as antenas patch
microstrip irradiam perpendicularmente ao plano de massa, que bloqueia a radiação da antena,
garantindo que o corpo humano é exposto apenas a uma fração muito pequena da radiação.
Para desenvolver este tipo de antena, é crucial conhecer as propriedades dos materiais têxteis,
bem como as técnicas de fabricação para conectar as camadas, com cola, costuras, folhas
adesivas, entre outros. Diversas propriedades dos materiais influenciam o comportamento da
antena. Por exemplo, a permitividade e a espessura do substrato determinam a largura de banda e a eficiência de uma antena planar. O uso de têxteis em antenas usáveis requer assim
uma caracterização precisa das suas propriedades. Os têxteis condutores elétricos são materiais
específicos que estão disponíveis comercialmente em diversas formas e têm sido utilizados com
sucesso para fabricar o elemento radiante e o plano de massa das antenas. Para fabricar o
substrato dielétrico têm sido utilizados materiais têxteis convencionais.
Geralmente, os materiais têxteis apresentam uma constante dielétrica (εr) muito baixa, o que
reduz as perdas de ondas superficiais e aumenta a largura de banda da antena. No entanto, os
materiais têxteis estão constantemente a trocar moléculas de água com o ambiente em que
estão inseridos, o que afeta as suas propriedades eletromagnéticas. Além disso, os tecidos e os
outros materiais têxteis planares são materiais porosos, anisotrópicos e compressíveis, cuja
espessura e densidade variam sob muito baixas pressões. Portanto, é importante saber como
estas grandezas e características estruturais influenciam o comportamento da antena, de forma
a minimizar os efeitos indesejáveis.
Para explicar algumas das influências do material têxtil no desempenho das antenas usáveis,
esta Tese de Doutoramento começa por fazer o estado da arte sobre os pontos-chave para o
desenvolvimento de antenas têxteis, desde a escolha dos materiais têxteis até ao processo de
fabrico da antena. Além disso, a tese identifica e apresenta uma análise dos materiais têxteis
e técnicas de fabricação que têm sido utilizados e referidos na literatura.
A caracterização rigorosa dos materiais têxteis para usar como substrato dielétrico em sistemas
usáveis é fundamental. No entanto, pouca informação existe sobre a caracterização das
propriedades eletromagnéticas dos têxteis vulgares. Como já referido, os tecidos, malhas e
não-tecidos são materiais heterogéneos, altamente porosos, compressíveis e facilmente
influenciados pelas condições higrométricas ambientais, dificultando a sua caracterização
eletromagnética. Não havendo nenhum método padrão, vários autores têm vindo a adaptar
algumas técnicas para a caracterização dielétrica dos materiais têxteis. Esta Tese de
Doutoramento foca a caracterização dielétrica dos materiais têxteis, revendo os métodos
ressonantes e não ressonantes que foram propostos para caracterizar os materiais têxteis e o
couro. Além disso, esta Tese de Doutoramento resume a caracterização de dieléctricos têxteis
feita através dos métodos revistos e que foi validada testando antenas que apresentaram um
bom desempenho.
No seguimento da revisão, apresenta-se uma Técnica Experimental Baseada em Ressonância.
Esta nova técnica baseia-se na teoria da perturbação de ressonância, sendo a permitividade e
tangente de perda extraídas com base nas mudanças de frequência causadas pela introdução
de um superstrato no elemento radiante de uma antena patch microstrip. Os resultados de
caracterização obtidos através deste método revelam que, ao posicionar a face mais rugosa do
material em teste em contato com a placa de ressonância, o valor da constante dielétrica
extraída é inferior ao valor extraído quando esta face é colocada ao contrário. Com base nesta
observação, as propriedades estruturais da superfície dos materiais têxteis foram investigadas
e a sua influência no desempenho das antenas foi analisada. Assim, esta Tese de Doutoramento relaciona os resultados da caracterização dielétrica com
alguns parâmetros estruturais dos materiais, como rugosidade da superfície, porosidades
superficial e total. Os resultados mostram que tanto a rugosidade como a porosidade superficial
das amostras influenciam os resultados, que dependem assim do posicionamento do material
que está a ser testado. Também foi analisada a influência do posicionamento do material
dielétrico na performance das antenas têxteis tipo patch microstrip. Para isso, foram
desenvolvidos e testados doze protótipos de antenas patch microstrip. Os resultados mostram
que, apesar das diferenças observadas durante o processo de caracterização, o valor médio da
permitividade é adequado para a modelação das antenas, garantindo um bom desempenho.
De acordo com o relatório da Comissão Europeia, “Internet das Coisas - Um plano de ação para
a Europa”, emitido em 2009, nos próximos anos a Internet das Coisas poderá melhorar a
qualidade de vida das pessoas, nomeadamente pela monitorização da saúde. No contexto das
Redes de Sensores Sem Fios do Corpo Humano, a integração de antenas têxteis para recolha de
energia em roupas inteligentes é uma solução particularmente interessante, pois permite uma
alimentação sem fios e contínua dos dispositivos. De fato, nos dispositivos usáveis a substituição
de baterias não é fácil de praticar. Um dos objetivos específicos desta Tese de Doutoramento
é, portanto, descrever o conceito de recolha de energia e apresentar o estado da arte sobre
antenas têxteis para recolha de energia proveniente da Rádio Frequência (RF). Nesta tese, é
também proposta uma antena impressa do tipo monopolo de dupla banda, fabricada em
substrato têxtil, para recolha de energia eletromagnética, operando nas bandas GSM 900 e DCS
1800. A antena visa recolher energia para alimentar os nós de sensores de um sistema usável
para monitorização da saúde. Os ganhos da antena apresentada foram cerca de 1.8 dBi e 2.06
dBi, aliados a uma eficiência de radiação de 82% e 77.6% para as faixas de frequência mais
baixa e alta, respetivamente.
Para entender e melhorar o desempenho da antena impressa tipo monopolo de dupla banda em
substrato têxtil, várias técnicas de fabrico foram testadas através de testes preliminares, de
forma a identificar as técnicas promissoras e a descartar as ineficientes, como é o caso da
técnica de colagem. De seguida, analisou-se a influência de vários parâmetros das técnicas de
fabrico sobre o desempenho da antena, como o uso de vapor durante a laminação, o tipo de
folha adesiva, a orientação dos elementos irradiantes e outros. Para isto, sete protótipos da
antena têxtil monopolar impressa foram fabricados por técnicas de laminação e bordado.
As medições da resistência elétrica superficial, Rs, mostrou que a presença da folha adesiva
usada no processo de laminagem pode reduzir a condutividade dos materiais condutores. Apesar
disso, ao medir o S11 das antenas impressas tipo monopolo produzidas por laminagem, os
resultados mostram que as antenas têm uma boa adaptação da impedância. Os resultados
também mostram que a orientação do tecido condutor, neste caso um tafetá, não influencia o
desempenho das antenas. No entanto, ao testar antenas bordadas, os resultados mostram que
a direção e o número de pontos no bordado podem influenciar o desempenho da antena e,
portanto, estas são características que devem ser consideradas durante a fabricação. De um modo geral, as antenas têxteis funcionam bem e seus resultados suportam e dão origem
ao um novo conceito de substrato contínuo para melhorar a integração de antenas têxteis no
vestuário, de maneira mais confortável e elegante. A tese apresenta um protótipo
demonstrador deste conceito, o E-Caption: A Smart and Sustainable Coat. Neste protótipo de
casaco inteligente, a antena impressa está totalmente integrada, pois o seu substrato dielétrico
é o próprio mat
Sustainability principles through educational e-textile kit
Innovations in smart textiles technology are on the rise with a promise to add value to the consumer's life (Goodman et al., 2018). However, these innovations and the high development speed involved also raise concerns about environmental issues related to these trends (Van der Velden et al., 2015). Therefore, TTorch project was created which aim is to bring different fields, like electronics and textile engineering, together to create a kit for educational purposes and follow circular economy principles while doing it. TTorch is a creative toy with a development kit for up to 10-year-old children, using e-textile principles. The product kit creates a bridge between engineering and design, by letting the user explore a personal light source and build surroundings to it. The goal of the project is to show how interdisciplinary fields can work together and with that creating different opportunities. This paper gives a short overview of e-textiles, research on e-waste, textile waste and e-textile waste management. Further on it will focus on the necessary collaboration between design, engineering and industry by emphasising difference between core team and network around the core team. The collaboration aim it to create ecological product kit for educational purposes following the concept of STEAM. Discussions will include how collaboration between team members with diverse backgrounds, and surrounding network was necessary to identify specific gap in the market and to evolve the idea from product to development kit
The (New) roles of prototypes during the co-development of digital product service systems
This paper investigates different roles that prototypes play during the development of digital Product Service Systems (PSSs). A literature review reveals that prototyping supports designers during the design process, as well as during knowledge sharing processes with stakeholders. To create a better understanding of these two co-existing roles of prototyping, we executed a research-through-design project in the healthcare domain. This design project was centred around the development of four different prototypes that the designer sequentially developed. A major input into the design process was co-reflection sessions between the designer and different stakeholders. We analysed the prototyping process and the co-reflection sessions. Moreover, we executed a conversational analysis to understand the actual knowledge sharing processes between the designer and the different stakeholders. The results present a detailed overview of the different (co-existing) roles of the prototypes. We distinguished two new types of prototypes which were both related to the development of the intangible aspects of the digital PSS: (1) service interface prototrial aimed at exploring several options for detailing the different intangible aspects of the digital PSS, and (2) service provotype to stimulate collaborative creation of the intangible aspects of the digital PSS in an early stage
Biosignal monitoring implemented in a swimsuit for athlete performance evaluation
Monitor athletes during exercise has always been a
major challenge for engineers and researchers due to
the restrictions involving the measurement of
physiological and performance parameters. An
athlete should have complete freedom to perform his
normal activity, in order to be correctly monitored.
The advent of e-textiles can give an important
contribution to overcome these limitations since it is
possible to integrate sensors in garments and thus
perform monitoring without limiting the freedom of
movements. This paper presents part of the work
that is being carried out in the project entitled
BIOSWIM, which envisions the development of an
instrumented swimsuit, capable of acquiring several
physiological and performance related signals with
the purpose of aiding the trainer in improving the
technical component of the swimmer and improve
his performance. This paper will give an overview
of the monitoring system and the textile sensors that
were developed, namely for biopotential
measurement.Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) - projeto Bioswim (PTDC/EEAELC/70803/2006
Smart textiles for improved quality of life and cognitive assessment
Smart textiles can be used as innovative solutions to amuse, meaningfully engage, comfort, entertain, stimulate, and to overall improve the quality of life for people living in care homes with dementia or its precursor mild cognitive impairment (MCI). This concept paper presents a smart textile prototype to both entertain and monitor/assess the behavior of the relevant clients. The prototype includes physical computing components for music playing and simple interaction, but additionally games and data logging systems, to determine baselines of activity and interaction. Using microelectronics, light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and capacitive touch sensors woven into a fabric, the study demonstrates the kinds of augmentations possible over the normal manipulation of the traditional non-smart activity apron by incorporating light and sound effects as feedback when patients interact with different regions of the textile. A data logging system will record the patient’s behavioral patterns. This would include the location, frequency, and time of the patient’s activities within the different textile areas. The textile will be placed across the laps of the resident, which they then play with, permitting the development of a behavioral profile through the gamification of cognitive tests. This concept paper outlines the development of a prototype sensor system and highlights the challenges related to its use in a care home setting. The research implements a wide range of functionality through a novel architecture involving loosely coupling and concentrating artifacts on the top layer and technology on the bottom layer. Components in a loosely coupled system can be replaced with alternative implementations that provide the same services, and so this gives the solution the best flexibility. The literature shows that existing architectures that are strongly coupled result in difficulties modeling different individuals without incurring significant costs. © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland
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