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Electrical impedance

About: Electrical impedance is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 36015 publications have been published within this topic receiving 371891 citations. The topic is also known as: electrical impedance & complex impedance.


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Patent
17 Jan 2012
TL;DR: A method of assessing a tissue ablation treatment, including positioning a medical device adjacent a target tissue, measuring a first impedance magnitude at a first frequency with the medical device, ablating at least a portion of the target tissue with the device, measuring at second impedance magnitude in a third frequency, and measuring a second impedance phase at a fourth frequency, was proposed in this paper.
Abstract: A method of assessing a tissue ablation treatment, including positioning a medical device adjacent a target tissue; measuring a first impedance magnitude a first frequency with the medical device; measuring a first impedance phase at a second frequency with the medical device; ablating at least a portion of the target tissue with the medical device; measuring at second impedance magnitude at a third frequency with the medical device; measuring a second impedance phase at a fourth frequency with the medical device; comparing at least one of (i) the first and second impedance magnitudes and (ii) the first and second impedance phases; and providing an indication of the efficacy of the ablation treatment based at least in part on the comparison.

79 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a specific technique for measuring fast variations of the high-frequency impedance of ultramicroelectrodes under potential control is presented, which allows real-time electrolyte-resistance measurement.
Abstract: A specific technique for measuring fast variations of the high-frequency impedance of ultramicroelectrodes (UME) under potential control is presented. It allows real-time electrolyte-resistance Re ...

79 citations

Patent
07 Oct 2003
TL;DR: In this paper, a method for measuring the volume, the composition and the movement of electroconductive body fluids, based on the electrical impedance of the body or a body segment, especially for performing electromechanocardiography (ELMEC) or impedance cardiography (IKG) measurements for determining hemodynamic parameters was proposed.
Abstract: The invention relates to a method for measuring the volume, the composition and the movement (HZV) of electroconductive body fluids, based on the electrical impedance of the body or a body segment, especially for performing electromechanocardiography (ELMEC) or impedance cardiography (IKG) measurements for determining hemodynamic parameters. According to said method, an alternating measuring current (52) of at least one frequency is introduced into the body (60, 70), and the impedance and temporal variations (AZ) thereof of essentially the same body segment through which the alternating measuring current flows are measured for at least two different measuring lengths (L, L2, L3, L4, L5), essentially in the longitudinal direction of the body.

79 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that polypyrrole-CNT coating significantly reduced the microelectrode impedance at all neuronal signal frequencies and induced a significant improvement of the SNR, up to fourfold on average, in the 150-1500 Hz frequency range, largely corresponding to the multiunit frequency band.
Abstract: Extracellular metal microelectrodes are widely used to record single neuron activity in vivo. However, their signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is often far from optimal due to their high impedance value. It has been recently reported that carbon nanotube (CNT) coatings may decrease microelectrode impedance, thus improving their performance. To tease out the different contributions to SNR of CNT-coated microelectrodes we carried out impedance and noise spectroscopy measurements of platinum/tungsten microelectrodes coated with a polypyrrole–CNT composite. Neuronal signals were recorded in vivo from rat cortex by employing tetrodes with two recording sites coated with polypyrrole–CNT and the remaining two left untreated. We found that polypyrrole–CNT coating significantly reduced the microelectrode impedance at all neuronal signal frequencies (from 1 to 10 000 Hz) and induced a significant improvement of the SNR, up to fourfold on average, in the 150–1500 Hz frequency range, largely corresponding to the multiunit frequency band. An equivalent circuit, previously proposed for porous conducting polymer coatings, reproduced the impedance spectra of our coated electrodes but could not explain the frequency dependence of SNR improvement following polypyrrole–CNT coating. This implies that neither the neural signal amplitude, as recorded by a CNT-coated metal microelectrode, nor noise can be fully described by the equivalent circuit model we used here and suggests that a more detailed approach may be needed to better understand the signal propagation at the electrode–solution interface. Finally, the presence of significant noise components that are neither thermal nor electronic makes it difficult to establish a direct relationship between the actual electrode noise and the impedance spectra.

79 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that for a nominal 40 μm × 40μm channel, the impedance signal is independent of position over the majority of the channel area, but shows large experimentally verifiable variation at extreme positions.
Abstract: Single cell impedance cytometry is a label-free electrical analysis method that requires minimal sample preparation and has been used to count and discriminate cells on the basis of their impedance properties. This paper shows experimental and numerically simulated impedance signals for test particles (6 μm diameter polystyrene) flowing through a microfluidic channel. The variation of impedance signal with particle position is mapped using numerical simulation and these results match closely with experimental data. We demonstrate that for a nominal 40 μm × 40 μm channel, the impedance signal is independent of position over the majority of the channel area, but shows large experimentally verifiable variation at extreme positions. The parabolic flow profile in the channel ensures that most of the sample flows through the area of uniform signal. At high flow rates inertial focusing is observed; the particles flow in equal numbers through two equilibrium positions reducing the coefficient of variance (CV) in the impedance signals to negligible values.

79 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231,514
20223,479
20211,009
20201,579
20191,924
20181,809