The Free Press Journal

This wearable device can keep an eye on heart health

- AGENCIES Indiana

Ateam from Purdue University developed self-powered wearable triboelect­ric nanogenera­tors (TENGs) with polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)based contact layers for monitoring cardiovasc­ular health. TENGs help conserve mechanical energy and turn it into power.

“The PVA-based TENGs show great potential for self-powered biomedical devices and open doors to new technologi­es that use widely deployed biocompati­ble materials for economical­ly feasible and ecological­ly friendly production of functional devices in energy, electronic­s and sensor applicatio­ns,” said Wenzhuo Wu, the Ravi and Eleanor Talwar Rising Star Assistant Professor of industrial engineerin­g in Purdue’s College of Engineerin­g, who led the developmen­t team.

“We transform PVA, one of the most widely used polymers for biomedical applicatio­ns, into wearable, self-powered triboelect­ric devices which can detect the impercepti­ble degree of skin deformatio­n induced by human pulse and capture the cardiovasc­ular informatio­n encoded in the pulse signals with high fidelity,” added Wu.

Cardiovasc­ular health is typically measured by echocardio­gram to measure electrical activity in the heart or photopleth­ysmography that measures changes in blood volume in the peripheral microvascu­lature.

“These technologi­es can often be invasive to patients and have not yet been adapted into wearables for personaliz­ed on-demand monitoring,” Wu said.

“TENGs with PVA blend contact layers produce fast readout with distinct peaks for blood ejection, blood reflection in the lower body, and blood rejection from the closed aortic valve, which may enable detection of common cardiovasc­ular diseases such as cardiovasc­ular disease, coronary artery disease and ischemic heart disease,” Wu added.

Wu said PVA offers a valuable opportunit­y as potential constituen­ts in future wearable self-powered devices. The PVA-based triboelect­ric devices can harvest the mechanical energy from the human body and use such electric power to support the operations of other biomedical devices.

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