IEEE transactions on bio-medical engineering
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IEEE Trans Biomed Eng · Apr 1993
Finite element modeling of electrode-skin contact impedance in electrical impedance tomography.
In electrical impedance tomography (EIT), we inject currents through and measure voltages from an array of surface electrodes. The measured voltages are sensitive to electrode-skin contact impedance because the contact impedance and the current density through this contact impedance are both high. We used large electrodes to provide a more uniform current distribution and reduce the contact impedance. ⋯ We used the finite element method (FEM) to study the electric field distributions underneath an electrode, and developed three models: a FEM model, a simplified FEM model and a weighted load model. We showed that the FEM models considered both shunting and edge effects and matched closely the experimental measurements. FEM models for electrodes can be used to improve the performance of an electrical impedance tomography reconstruction algorithm.