Method of masking apertures in a component and processing the component
US-11814742-B2 · Nov 14, 2023 · US
US2016143694A1 · US · A1
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-2016143694-A1 |
| Application number | US-201514877002-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | A1 |
| Filing date | Oct 7, 2015 |
| Priority date | Nov 18, 2014 |
| Publication date | May 26, 2016 |
| Grant date | — |
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An electrode cleaning system includes a medical device including a plurality of electrodes, a fluid reservoir including an electrolytic solution, and a cleaning device. The cleaning device is electrically coupled to the medical device, and is configured to channel a DC current between at least one pair of electrodes of the plurality of electrodes when the plurality of electrodes are submerged in the fluid reservoir.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1 . An electrode cleaning system comprising: a medical device comprising a plurality of electrodes; a fluid reservoir comprising an electrolytic solution; and a cleaning device electrically coupled to the medical device, the cleaning device configured to channel a DC current between at least one pair of electrodes of the plurality of electrodes when the plurality of electrodes are submerged in the fluid reservoir. 2 . The electrode cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the cleaning device is configured to: channel the DC current between the at least one pair of electrodes in a first direction for a first period of time; and channel the DC current between the at least one pair of electrodes in a second direction for a second period of time, wherein the second direction is opposite from the first direction. 3 . The electrode cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the fluid reservoir is a saline reservoir. 4 . The electrode cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the medical device is a catheter configured for use in a cardiac mapping or modeling system. 5 . The electrode cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the cleaning device further comprises an impedance measurement circuit configured to measure impedances between the plurality of electrodes. 6 . The electrode cleaning system of claim 5 , wherein the impedance measurement further circuit is further configured to: measure a temperature of the electrolytic solution; and normalize the measured impedances based on the measured temperature. 7 . The electrode cleaning system of claim 5 , wherein the cleaning device further comprises a processing device communicatively coupled to the impedance measurement circuit, the processing device configured to verify whether or not the medical device is currently in-vivo based on measurements acquired by the impedance measurement circuit. 8 . The electrode cleaning system of claim 5 , wherein the cleaning device further comprises a processing device communicatively coupled to the impedance measurement circuit, the processing device configured to determine whether or not the at least one pair of electrodes is substantially clean based on measurements acquired by the impedance measurement circuit. 9 . A cleaning device configured to electrically couple to a medical device having a plurality of electrodes, the cleaning device comprising: at least one current source configured to generate a DC current; and a plurality of switches operable to channel the DC current between at least one pair of electrodes of the plurality of electrodes when the plurality of electrodes are submerged in a fluid reservoir including an electrolytic solution. 10 . The cleaning device of claim 9 , wherein the at least one current source comprises: a first current source configured to generate a first DC current to be channeled between a first pair of electrodes of the at least one pair of electrodes; and a second current source configured to generate a second DC current to be channeled between a second pair of electrodes of the at least one pair of electrodes. 11 . The cleaning device of claim 9 , wherein the cleaning device is configured to: channel the DC current between the at least one pair of electrodes in a first direction for a first period of time; and channel the DC current between the at least one pair of electrodes in a second direction for a second period of time, wherein the second direction is opposite from the first direction. 12 . The cleaning device of claim 9 further comprising an impedance measurement circuit configured to measure impedances between the plurality of electrodes. 13 . The cleaning device of claim 12 further comprising a processing device communicatively coupled to the impedance measurement circuit, the processing device configured to verify whether or not the medical device is currently in-vivo based on measurements acquired by the impedance measurement circuit. 14 . The cleaning device of claim 12 further comprising a processing device communicatively coupled to the impedance measurement circuit, the processing device configured to determine whether or not the at least one pair of electrodes is substantially clean based on measurements acquired by the impedance measurement circuit. 15 . The cleaning device of claim 9 , wherein the cleaning device is a portable, handheld device. 16 . A method for cleaning a plurality of electrodes, the method comprising: electrically coupling a cleaning device to a medical device including the plurality of electrodes; submerging the plurality of electrodes in a fluid reservoir including an electrolytic solution; and channeling, using the cleaning device, a DC current between at least one pair of electrodes of the plurality of electrodes. 17 . The method of claim 16 , wherein channeling a DC current comprises: channeling the DC current between the at least one pair of electrodes in a first direction for a first period of time; and channeling the DC current between the at least one pair of electrodes in a second direction for a second period of time, wherein the second direction is opposite from the first direction. 18 . The method of claim 16 , further comprising measuring impedances between the plurality of electrodes using an impedance measurement circuit included within the cleaning device. 19 . The method of claim 18 , further comprising: measuring a temperature of the electrolytic solution; and normalizing the measured impedances based on the measured temperature. 20 . The method of claim 16 , wherein electrically coupling a cleaning device to a medical device comprises electrically coupling a portable, handheld cleaning device to the medical device.
Electrolytic cleaning, degreasing, pickling or descaling · CPC title
Pickling; Descaling · CPC title
Constructional parts, or assemblies thereof, of cells for electrolytic removal of material from objects (for both electrolytic coating and removal C25D); Servicing or operating · CPC title
Human Necessities · mapped topic
Human Necessities · mapped topic
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