This application is a National Phase Application based upon and claiming the benefit of priority to PCT/EP2006/011250, filed on Nov. 23, 2006 which is based upon and claims the benefit of priority to German Application 10 2005 055 842.9, filed on Nov. 23, 2005, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to a pressure sensor and a textile product including the sensor.
DE 10314211 A1 discloses a sock having a pressure sensor to measure the pressure distribution around the foot of, e.g., a diabetic patient. The measurement is used in the adaptation of a shoe to the patient's foot so as to avoid pressure peaks which would lead to tissue damage (diabetic foot syndrome). The sock includes a matrix of metallic fibers incorporated into the fabric of the sock. The metallic fibers are connected to an electronic circuit which computes the pressure distribution from the electric resistances at the intersections between the metallic fibers.
WO 2005/000052 A2 discloses a pressure sensitive input interface for an electronic device. The interface is incorporated into a textile garment and includes an array of conductive and non-conductive fibers.
It has been found that the textile pressure sensors known in the art do not allow precise measurement of an applied pressure over a sufficiently wide range. Instead, they exhibit essentially an on-off behavior where the electric resistance between the conductive drops sharply at a pressure threshold when the conductive come into contact with each other. But the resistance does not change significantly below or above the pressure threshold. Moreover, the pressure threshold is difficult to control and depends on hysteresis effects.
WO 98/33193 discloses a polymer composition showing an electrical resistivity which depends on distortion forces. The composition comprises conductive particles embedded in a non-conductive polymer.
It is an object of the invention to provide a pressure sensor which is compatible with textile production processes such as weaving, knitting, warp knitting or sewing and which gives precise and reliable pressure or force measurement results.
This object is solved by the pressure sensor of claim 1. The dependent claims relate to preferred embodiments of the invention and to textile products including the pressure sensor.
The pressure sensor of the invention has the advantage that the electric response on the applied pressure depends primarily on the response of the pressure sensitive layer in the multilayer thread, rather than on the contact resistance between the conductive threads. Thus, the sensor can give precise and reliable pressure or force measurement results.
The accompanying drawings are representations of preferred embodiments of the invention, wherein
In the following description, like elements throughout the different embodiments are designated by like reference numbers.
A textile pressure sensor in accordance with a first embodiment of the invention is shown in
The outer surfaces of the pressure sensitive layers 11 are covered by electrically conductive electrode layers 13. The pressure sensitive layers 11 are made of an electrically conductive elastic material that shows a pressure-dependent resistance between the conductive layer 12 and the electrode layers 13. The material may be a conductive polymer like polyaniline. Another preferred material is an elastic insulator such as silicone, including conductive filler particles such as carbon black particles. As an alternative, the pressure sensitive layers 11 may also be made of piezoelectric material.
As shown in
In a modification of the embodiment shown in the
a) shows a transverse cross-section of the multilayer thread 30 and
a) shows a cross-sectional view of the fabric at an intersection region 1 between two of the multilayer threads 30 of
When the conductive threads 25 and the multilayer threads 30 are connected to an electronic circuit as disclosed in DE 103 14 211 A1, the circuit can precisely measure the pressure at each of the intersection regions 1 where the conductive threads 25 and multilayer threads 30 intersect each other. The circuit then generates a three-dimensional image of the sock 70 with the pressure value acting on the surface of the sock 70 at each of the intersection regions 1 visualized by different shades of grey or by different colors.
The embodiments described above may be used to:
measure pathologic pressure peaks at the foot of a diabetic patient and thus help to prevent the diabetic foot syndrome,
measure pressure distributions during adaptation of a prosthesis to a patient,
measure the pressure distribution on a mattress and thus help to avoid tissue damage in patients who have to lie over prolonged periods of time,
measure physiological pressures in controlling breathing and artificial respiration, controlling blood pressure and heartbeat in a textile blood pressure measuring sleeve, and
measuring the forces exerted by stockings such as compression hosiery,
monitor forces acting on the human body during activities such as prolonged seating or sports (walking, running, bicycle-riding, horse-riding),
assist in the adaptation of shoes to an individual person, in particular in cases where the person cannot tell herself or himself whether a shoe fits or where a more perfect fit is essential such as in the adaptation of sports shoes, skiing boots etc. to individual athletes, and
measure forces and pressures in technical apparatus or robots.
In the embodiments described above, a first plurality of laminated strips 10 or multilayer threads 30 are arranged to intersect a second plurality of conductive threads 25 or multi-layer threads 30, so as to form a fabric 20 having an array of spaced apart intersection regions 1 where the pressure acting in thickness direction of the fabric can be measured. However, laminated strips 10 or multilayer threads 30 on the one hand and conductive threads 25 or multilayer threads 30 on the other hand may also be incorporated in parallel to each other into a textile product such as a rope. The electric resistance between them will then be a measure for the compressive pressure acting on the rope, i.e. the pressure integrated along the length of the rope. A rope of this kind incorporated into a mechanical structure such as a building, vehicle tire or other vehicle part is useful to measure the load acting on the part and to monitor its structural integrity. A rope of this kind may also be integrated into textile products such as compression hosiery to monitor their effectiveness.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2005 055 842 | Nov 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2006/011250 | 11/23/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/25/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/059971 | 5/31/2007 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080307899 A1 | Dec 2008 | US |