+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Date post: 04-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: raya-hutchinson
View: 43 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
The integration of smart textiles enabling a non-invasive approach in monitoring the user’s vitals and activities. Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles. Components. Sensors and actuators Communication devices Energy supply Data processing - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
29
The integration of smart textiles enabling a non-invasive approach in monitoring the user’s vitals and activities Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles
Transcript
Page 1: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

The integration of smart textiles enabling a non-invasive approach in monitoring the user’s vitals and activities

Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove

Department of textiles

Page 2: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Components

• Sensors and actuators• Communication devices• Energy supply• Data processing• Connections and interconnections

Miniaturisation, packaging, integration, transformation into textiles

Concepts and electro/photo active materials

Page 3: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Why textiles?

• All around• Versatile• Light weight• Large contact area with body• Comfortable• Easy to use

Page 4: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Electro conductive textiles

Stainless steel

Kevlar coated with

Knitted Woven non woven

polypyrrol copper gold

Page 5: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Effects from nano to macro

Page 6: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Conductive knitted textiles as sensor

Textrodes Respibelt

Page 7: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

EMG monitoring

Myography for stress measurementContactless

Professional use

EMG sensorsembroidered

laminated

(www.context-project.org)

Page 8: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Pressure sensors

Double layer fabric:No contact contact

Quantum tunneling effect

Page 9: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Any mechanism that changes conductivity is exploitable for sensors

• Carbon nanotubes for conductivity• Fibre expansion changes conductivity:

•Extension•Heating •Humidity•Chemicals (E. Devaux ENSAIT)

Page 10: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Humidity control

Sensors:

www.Biotex-eu.com

Absorption: • Thermoresponsive gels• Supporting design

Page 11: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Optical sensor

Signal A’

Smart interface

Signal B

Textile fibre

Sensor/Processing unit

Sig

nal A

filter

Page 12: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Smart interface: active dyes

skin

pH

days

Skin pH-variation after burn wound

L. Van der Schueren, K. De Clerck

Page 13: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Communication

Within components

Between components in a suit‣Conductive fibres‣Optical fibres

With the wearer: •keyboard, •display

Wide environment: •Inductive (embroidery)•Antenna (printing)

Page 14: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Data processing: Motherboard

Page 15: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Fibre transistor

Conductive core: gateInsulating coatingSemiconductor coatingElectrode: source

Electrode: drain

Semiconductor Source Insulator Gate Drain

OFET: organic field effect transistor

Page 16: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Coating: from dip to padding

Page 17: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

OFET textile integration

Weaving structure

Right patterns

Right contacts

No falso contacts

Stable contacts

100µm

Gate source drain

Page 18: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

PEDOT based battery

5 cm

Conducting yarns

1

PEDOT:PSS

Textile substrate

1 mm

Warp

Weft

5 cm

1 cm

Page 19: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Printed battery: results

Page 20: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Energy from light: PV

Solar bags

www.dephotex.com

Page 21: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Energy from motion: piezo electrics

Deformation leads to E field

Needs large surface, no thickness

PVDF

Challenges:• Materials• Concepts• Production (poling)Electrode

Piezo electric layerElectrode

Page 22: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Smart textile research

• Based on • (semi)conductive materials and structures• Smart dyes

• Conceptual design• Modelling and simulation• Manufacturing• Testing

Page 23: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Inner garment

Page 24: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Outer garment

Accelerometers

GPSAntenna

TextileAntenna

Flexible Battery

ExternalTemperature

Alarm

DataRecording

Processing Transmission

Page 25: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Victim patch

Parameter

• Heart beat rate

• Respiratory rate

• Body Temperature

Cfr. inner garment

Page 26: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Key issues

Comfort

Working conditions – relevant parameters

Effective alarm generation

System maintenance

Ease of use

Weight

Cost

Robustness

Energy constraints

Long range transmission

Page 27: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Monitoring Centre

Page 28: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

Accelerometers

GPSAntenna

TextileAntenna

Flexible Battery

ExternalTemperature

Alarm

DataRecording

Processing Transmission

150€

25€

>600€

1500€

www.cutecircuit.com

www.proetex.org

Page 29: Prof. Lieva Van Langenhove Department of textiles

www. .eu

Coordination action for enhancing the breakthrough of intelligent textile systems (e-textiles and wearable Microsystems)

www. .eu

COLAE: Commercialisation Clusters of OLAE


Recommended