ON Semiconductor adds to its range of image sensors for extreme low-light applications
Medical Electronics
Content related to medical electronics
Need to print a new spleen?
Bio-printing is printing cells and other body materials using 3D printers to create approximations to various body tissues and organs or to create scaffolds in which to grow such tissues, for medical research, for example. Commercial printers designed for the job are expensive – costing over $10,000 – according to Carnegie Mellon University, where a team has developed an add-on ...
350W ac-dc PSUs for industry and healthcare
XP Power today announced the launch of series of rugged 350W AC-DC chassis-mount PSUs, intended for industrial, technology and healthcare applications. SMP350 supplies have a built-in cooling fan, screw terminal connections, low (class-B) EMI emissions, and come in a 92 x 178 x 43mm enclosure – equating to 13W/in3. The series has a 85 to 264Vac input voltage range for use ...
Sensors at the heart of the matter
Wearable fitness devices require precision and low power operation in space-constrained designs. An optical pulse oximeter and heart-rate sensor can measure accurately without draining battery life. Is your fitness tracker – the device that you used to be diligent about wearing daily – now sitting in a drawer somewhere? Is that because you’ve always wondered exactly how accurate these things ...
Knowles offers EMI filters for space and medical
Syfer-branded EMI filters from Knowles Precision Devices are being targeted at medical implantable devices and the space sector. Designed for replacing conventional array filters in medical implantable devices is the SYFER E03 (X2Y) range. Available in case sizes from 0805 to 2220 these are integrated passive devices featuring both common and differential mode capacitors in a single MLCC chip. C0G and X7R ...
AI diagnoses eye diseases following Big Data analysis
Macular degeneration and diabetic macular edema can be diagnosed by artificial intelligence viewing non-invasive light-based optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans. The AI can also make referral and treatment recommendations. “Macular degeneration and diabetic macular edema are the two most common causes of irreversible blindness but are both very treatable if they are caught early,” said University of California San Diego ...
Stretchy sensor suits human movement from heartbeat to running knees
An ultra-stretchy sticky-backed sensor has come out of research at the University of British Columbia. Made from a rubber infused with graphene nano-flakes, it has been tested with elongation up to 350% and over 10,000 cycles of stretching and relaxing while maintaining electrical stability. “We tested this sensor vigorously,” said Professor Homayoun Najjaran. “Not only did it maintain its form ...
IoT prescribes smarter, smaller medical antennae
Connected medical devices are driving demand for sophisticated RF and antenna technology, writes Martin Keenan. There is huge scope for connected medical devices, whether it is equipment that monitors patients’ vital signs or wearable activity monitors. Healthcare is widely thought to be one of the biggest potential applications for the internet of things (IoT). According to a report from MarketResearch.com, ...
Medical connector is ‘fool-proof’
ELC series 570 connectors have an intuitive locking system to ensure positive mating, and mis-mating is discouraged thanks to a mating position defined by the shape of the mating area, according to its manufacturer Binder. Intended for medical systems, female panel mount connector is protected against the ingress of liquids, water splash and accidental electrical contact, said binder, and, when ...
e-pill monitors hydrogen, CO2 and oxygen in real-time
Researchers at RMIT University in Melbourne have created a gas sensing pill that measures gut gasses after being swallowed. It uses a novel gas sensing technique, that has now been patented. According to ‘A human pilot trial of ingestible electronic capsules capable of sensing different gases in the gut‘, a paper in Nature Electronics, accuracy is better than 1% for ...