Energy Autonomous Wearable Sensors for Smart Healthcare: A Review

12/05/2019
by   Abhishek Singh Dahiya, et al.
0

Energy Autonomous Wearable Sensors (EAWS) have attracted a large interest due to their potential to provide reliable measurements and continuous bioelectric signals, which help to reduce health risk factors early on, ongoing assessment for disease prevention, and maintaining optimum, lifelong health quality. This review paper presents recent developments and state-of-the-art research related to three critical elements that enable an EAWS. The first element is wearable sensors, which monitor human body physiological signals and activities. Emphasis is given on explaining different types of transduction mechanisms presented, and emerging materials and fabrication techniques. The second element is the flexible and wearable energy storage device to drive low-power electronics and the software needed for automatic detection of unstable physiological parameters. The third is the flexible and stretchable energy harvesting module to recharge batteries for continuous operation of wearable sensors. We conclude by discussing some of the technical challenges in realizing energy-autonomous wearable sensing technologies and possible solutions for overcoming them.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
07/24/2021

A Survey of Wearable Devices Pairing Based on Biometric Signals

With the growth of wearable devices, which are usually constrained in co...
research
04/30/2023

Multimodal Earable Sensing for Human Energy Expenditure Estimation

Energy Expenditure Estimation (EEE) is vital for maintaining weight, man...
research
01/08/2021

FENet: A Frequency Extraction Network for Obstructive Sleep Apnea Detection

Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a highly prevalent but inconspicuous di...
research
12/21/2022

Bioelectronic Sensor Nodes for Internet of Bodies

Energy-efficient sensing with Physically-secure communication for bio-se...
research
12/08/2021

Adaptive R-Peak Detection on Wearable ECG Sensors for High-Intensity Exercise

Objective: Continuous monitoring of biosignals via wearable sensors has ...
research
09/20/2023

Brief Architectural Survey of Biopotential Recording Front-Ends since the 1970s

Measuring the bioelectric signals is one of the key functions in wearabl...
research
12/20/2021

State-of-the-Art in Smart Contact Lenses for Human Machine Interaction

Contact lenses have traditionally been used for vision correction applic...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset