Patent · US Expired

Long-life biomedical application device, particularly electrode, and method of transferring electrical current

US4526176A · kind A · utility

49Cited by
9References
19Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateDec 22, 1981
Grant dateJul 2, 1985
Priority date
Expiry dateDec 22, 2001

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC A)Human Necessities
  • CPC primaryA61B2562/0217
  • WIPO fieldMedical technology
  • WIPO sectorInstruments

Abstract

To separate electrolyte (70) within a chamber (66) formed beneath a dome-like housing (24) from a signal transmission connector (34) and thus prevent corrosion of the terminal portion (38, 40) exposed to the interior of the chamber by the electrolyte, the interior of the chamber (66) is subdivided into two chambers (166, 266) by enclosing within said chamber a plastic bag (101) or stretching a membrane (102) thereacross, the subdividing means (101, 102) being ruptured upon depression of the contact terminal (34) of the housing; the electrolyte is retained solely within the chamber (266, 266a) separate from the interior portion (38, 40) of the terminal so that the corrosive influence of the electrolyte is prevented from attacking the metal of the terminal prior to use of the electrode, and during storage. Preferably, the chamber (166, 166a) to which also the terminal is exposed may retain other liquids which are inert with respect to the electrode, and which, preferably, are also separated from the electrolyte, such as a surfactant ( 170) to, additionally, permit a wider choice of, respectively, electrolytes and surfactants without unintended leakage of electrolyte through the micro…

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.