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PIEZOELECTRIC PROPERTIES OF DRY HUMAN SKIN

PIEZOELECTRIC PROPERTIES OF DRY HUMAN SKIN

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5;14<br />

i<br />

13<br />

z<br />

e1<br />

>1<br />

-Dermis<br />

-Oriented Collagen<br />

Fag. 2: Temrperature dependence of reaZ (dLf) and<br />

imaginary (d"' ) parts of shear stress piezoeZectric<br />

coefficient ot human dermis and pure coZZagen<br />

(coZZagen data from [13]).<br />

to 0.2 pC/N, a factor 5 to 10 times higher than the<br />

typical value of true epidermis. Neither pyroelectri c<br />

response nor thickness compression piezoelectricity<br />

were detected in the horny layer samples.<br />

A MODEL <strong>OF</strong> <strong>SKIN</strong> <strong>PIEZOELECTRIC</strong>ITY BASED ON<br />

MICROSTRUCTURAL ORGANIZATION<br />

<strong>OF</strong> FIBROUS PROTEINS<br />

Fibrous proteins constitute a major component of skin.<br />

IEEE Transactions on Electrical Insulation Vol. EI-21 No.3,<br />

/<br />

T(C)<br />

/<br />

June 1986<br />

They are, in the epidermal cells or in the form of fully<br />

developed keratin in the horny layer or finally as<br />

a three-dimensional network of collagen filaments in<br />

dermis (also containing elastin and reticulin) [15].<br />

M<br />

_-<br />

0.5<br />

0<br />

-0.5<br />

E<br />

4 z<br />

Fig. 3: In-pZane anguZar dependence of the reaZ<br />

part of elastic moduZus (c') and piezoeZectric coefficient<br />

(dT) for samples of epidermis from the<br />

thigh.<br />

The organization and orientation of fibrous proteins<br />

show distinctive features in the three cutaneous sections<br />

which may prove to be related strictly to the<br />

particular tensorial form assumed by the piezoelectric<br />

coefficients and to the eventual presence of local symmetry<br />

in the orientational arrangement, which may be<br />

compatible with pyroelectric activity.<br />

Fig. S shows a schematic drawing of skin, where the<br />

arrangement of fibrous proteins, as determined from<br />

X-ray analysis or ultrastructural observations [15], is<br />

clearly evident.<br />

The collagen network of dermis, as compared to the<br />

collagenous structural frame of other connective tissues<br />

such as bone and tendons, appears to be less ordered<br />

and oriented. Some degree of orientation, however,<br />

exists and it varies from one area to the next.<br />

For the sake of formulating a structural model of<br />

piezoelectricity in dermis, a loose, slightly oriented<br />

collagen network is compatible with shear piezoelectricity,<br />

but does not support any pyroelectric activity.<br />

These findings have been indeed observed in the<br />

present study as previously described.<br />

A more complex picture needs to be analyzed for what<br />

fibrous proteins arrangement is applicable to human<br />

epidermis. It appears that piezoelectric properties in<br />

epidermis originate from a-helical keratin-like tonofibrils,<br />

and their orientational arrangement is crucial<br />

to infer possible structures of their corresponding coefficient<br />

tensor. An almost uniaxial orientation of<br />

tonofibrils perpendicular to the plane of the epidermis<br />

is indeed found in the basal cells layer [18],<br />

these tonofibrils being seen as precursors of fully<br />

developed keratin. The uniaxial arrangements of tonofibrils<br />

in the basal cells is progressively lost in upwards<br />

epidermal areas to assume a more isotropic, star-<br />

Authorized licensed use limited to: University of Texas at Austin. Downloaded on June 7, 2009 at 20:31 from IEEE Xplore. Restrictions apply.<br />

2<br />

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