Abstract

The wearable biomedical devices are promising technologies in the field of human healthcare as the sensors are attached to human skin to monitor in real time physiological signal. The signal drift caused by the damage of adhesive layer between the sensor electrode and human skin is an important factor that affects the detection accuracy of the sensor. Considering the viscoelasticity and conductivity of the adhesive layer, a rate-dependent electrical–mechanical cohesive zone model (CZM) was developed to simulate the electrical signal degradation of wearable sensor electrode during cyclic loading condition. In the proposed CZM, the electrical response of the adhesive layer is related to its mechanical behavior and damage state, and the rate-dependent mechanical behavior of the adhesive layer is described by the Maxwell model. In addition, the fatigue damage evolution is also rate-dependent as the threshold of damage initiation and fracture are defined as the function of loading velocity. The proposed CZM was implemented in ABAQUS by the UEL subroutine and applied to simulate the damage and electrical signal degradation of a wearable electrocardiograph (ECG) sensor electrode in working condition. The results demonstrated that the proposed CZM is effective to characterize the rate-dependent fatigue damage behavior and electrical signal degradation behavior of the ECG electrode during cyclic loadings. It is a promising tool for predicting the electrical signal drift of wearable healthcare sensors and other similar components caused by the damage of adhesive layer, which is important for the accurate calibration of the sensors in long-term service.

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