Abstract

Electromyography (EMG), the measurement of electrical muscle activity, is used in a variety of applications, including myoelectric upper-limb prostheses, which help amputees to regain independence and a higher quality of life. The state-of-the-art sensors in prostheses have a conductive connection to the skin and are therefore sensitive to sweat and require preparation of the skin. They are applied with some pressure to ensure a conductive connection, which may result in pressure marks and can be problematic for patients with circulatory disorders, who constitute a major group of amputees. Due to their insulating layer between skin and sensor area, capacitive sensors are insensitive to the skin condition, they require neither conductive connection to the skin nor electrolytic paste or skin preparation. Here, we describe a highly stable, low-power capacitive EMG measurement set-up that is suitable for real-world application. Various flexible multi-layer sensor set-ups made of copper and insulating foils, flex print and textiles were compared. These flexible sensor set-ups adapt to the anatomy of the human forearm, therefore they provide high wearing comfort and ensure stability against motion artifacts. The influence of the materials used in the sensor set-up on the magnitude of the coupled signal was demonstrated based on both theoretical analysis and measurement.The amplifier circuit was optimized for high signal quality, low power consumption and mobile application. Different shielding and guarding concepts were compared, leading to high SNR.

Highlights

  • Upper-limb prostheses are extremely helpful devices for people with amputations

  • Each measurement had a duration of 10 s, the contraction onset in the first 2 s was discarded and the remaining 8 s EMG of maximum voluntary wrist extension was used in the evaluation

  • Insulated EMG measurement is associated with several challenges

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Summary

Introduction

By using surface electromyography (sEMG), so-called myoelectric prostheses can move actively. There are already various sEMG electrodes available on the market, and numerous research articles have focused on pattern recognition to enable movement at a high level of dexterity [1,2]. Due to unsatisfactory robustness against various interferences [3], most of these systems have not yet been applied for daily use. The amputee must choose between a basic system with low functionality and a system that enables high dexterity but requires more cognitive effort [4]. If the system is unstable or requires excessive cognitive effort, amputees might switch to passive use or even reject the prostheses entirely, which leads to detrimental effects on the contralateral limb due to overuse [5].

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