Dariush Salami
Published © MIT

SensWear: An Open Source Modular Wearable Platform

An open, modular wearable hardware platform for researchers and makers, building flexible sensing and edge AI.

ExpertWork in progress635
SensWear: An Open Source Modular Wearable Platform

Things used in this project

Hardware components

nRF54L15
Nordic Semiconductor nRF54L15
×1
Maxim Integrated MAX30101 Pulse Oximeter & Heart-Rate Sensor
×1
Bosch BHI360 IMU Sensor
×1
Texas Instruments TPSM83102 Output Current Buck-Boost Module
×1
Texas Instruments LP5562 Four-Channel RGB- or White-LED Driver With Internal Program Memory and Independent Channel Control
×1
STMicroelectronics M95P32 Ultra low-power 32 Mbit Serial SPI Page EEPROM
×1
Texas Instruments TPS62840 high-efficiency step-down converter
×1
Texas Instruments BQ27427 Single-cell battery fuel gauge with pre-programmed chemistry and integrated sense resistor
×1
Texas Instruments BQ25180 linear charger with regulated power path
×1
Microchip MTCH6102 Low-Power Projected Capacitive Touch Controller
×1
Texas Instruments DRV2605 Haptic Driver for ERM and LRA With Built-In Library and Smart-Loop Architecture
×1
Maxim Integrated MAX30208 Low-Power, High-Accuracy Digital Temperature Sensor
×1

Story

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Schematics

Platform Paper

If you need more detail about the system. Please feel free to check out our paper as well.

Credits

Dariush Salami
1 project • 3 followers
PhD in AI/ML and a scientist at SensWear building next-gen wireless sensing and open wearable tech.

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