Two Realizations of the Wearable PPG Sensor Working in Reflectance Mode for Measurement in Weak Magnetic Field †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Subject and Methods
PPG Signal Processing
3. Measurement Experiments
- Basic testing and verification of functionality of sensor’s structural blocks were performed including measurement of the sensor’s mean DC current with 5/3.3/3.7 V power supply for three functional states: without BT connection (NC), after established connection to the control device (CE), and during transmission of PPG signal samples to the laptop (MC)—compare values in Table 1.
- Auxiliary analysis of the MA filtering effect on the PPG signal properties and HR determination for half a window length NX = {0, 4, 8, 10, 12}—see visualization for the PPG wave from the sensor PPG-PS1 in Figure 2 (NX = 0 means no filtering).
- Comparative measurement in the normal laboratory conditions—PPG signal sensing and parallel measurement with the pulse oximeter Berry BM1000C [14] by Shanghai Berry Electronic Tech Co. Ltd. for calibration of the determined HR values. This type of oximeter with an optical sensor working in a transmission mode enables also recording of blood oxygen saturation and HR values to the control device (tablet) via BT connection. PPG sensors are mounted on little fingers of both hands by an elastic ribbon, the oximeter device on the forefingers as documented in Figure 3. The recording of PPG signals as well as oximeter values lasted for 80 s. The HR values obtained in this way were subsequently processed off-line and analyzed statistically—see the results for all tested persons in Figure 4.
- Preliminary mapping of conditions for wireless connection through the shielding cage of the open-air MRI device E-scan Opera by Esaote S.p.A. [15] located at the Institute of Measurement Science in Bratislava.
- First-step measurement of the PPG signals in a low magnetic field environment of the MRI device for two working states: the tested person lying in the MRI scanning area with no scanner activity and the 3D scan sequence running—see the measurement arrangement photo in Figure 5.
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Sensor Type/Func. State | NC | CE | MC |
---|---|---|---|
PPG-PS1 1 | 18 mA | 26 mA | 30 mA |
PPG-BLE 2,3 | 10.5/13.5 mA | 11/14 mA | 13/17 mA |
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Přibil, J.; Přibilová, A.; Frollo, I. Two Realizations of the Wearable PPG Sensor Working in Reflectance Mode for Measurement in Weak Magnetic Field. Eng. Proc. 2021, 10, 55. https://doi.org/10.3390/ecsa-8-11252
Přibil J, Přibilová A, Frollo I. Two Realizations of the Wearable PPG Sensor Working in Reflectance Mode for Measurement in Weak Magnetic Field. Engineering Proceedings. 2021; 10(1):55. https://doi.org/10.3390/ecsa-8-11252
Chicago/Turabian StylePřibil, Jiří, Anna Přibilová, and Ivan Frollo. 2021. "Two Realizations of the Wearable PPG Sensor Working in Reflectance Mode for Measurement in Weak Magnetic Field" Engineering Proceedings 10, no. 1: 55. https://doi.org/10.3390/ecsa-8-11252
APA StylePřibil, J., Přibilová, A., & Frollo, I. (2021). Two Realizations of the Wearable PPG Sensor Working in Reflectance Mode for Measurement in Weak Magnetic Field. Engineering Proceedings, 10(1), 55. https://doi.org/10.3390/ecsa-8-11252