Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Materials World
Apple Rethinks Paper Packaging
The Quality Gap
Behind the Battery Report
The Quality Gap
Blind Spots in Electronics Quality
Design to Reality
Building for the Brain: Pioneering a Long-Term Neural Implant
Design to Reality
CT Teardown: AirPods Pro (3rd Generation)
Materials World
Comparing Wine Corks: Natural, Technical, and Synthetic
Recall Radar
Defective On Arrival
Design to Reality
Evolution of the Plastic Bottle
Recall Radar
Fall on Fire
From The Floor
Finding Lead in Stanley's Quencher
Materials World
From Rust to Silicon: A Week of Storage Media
Design to Reality
Heinz’s Sustainable Ketchup Cap
Recall Radar
Hidden Failures of Everyday Interfaces
Design to Reality
How Does a Car Cigarette Lighter Work?
Design to Reality
How I Think About R&D (and Turning Ideas Into Products)
The Quality Gap
How People Drive Quality
From The Floor
How to Read a Plastic Bottle
Materials World
Materials That Make or Break a Shoe
Design to Reality
Pulling the Thread on Talenti’s Stubborn Lids
The Quality Gap
Reshoring's Hidden Constraint: Quality
Recall Radar
Routine Uses, Real Risks
Recall Radar
Safety Gaps That Keep Shipping
From The Floor
The Missing Middle in Battery Manufacturing
From The Floor
The Secret to Better Running Shoes? CT Scanning
Recall Radar
Tolerance Tested
Design to Reality
What QMSR Means for Medical Device Product Lifecycle Management
The Quality Gap
What Went Wrong Inside These Recalled Power Banks?
The Quality Gap
What’s Inside Your Water Filter? A CT Scan Comparison
Materials World
バッテリーの中身は?

Health is Wealth

Health Wearables

Medical

Health wearables have become the most personal technology we own, to the point that some of us take them with us to bed every night. Entering the mainstream around 2015 with the launch of the Apple Watch, fitness tracking soon became a daily biometric habit and paved the way for medical-grade sensors to move from clinics to consumers. Today, they sit against our skin, read our rhythms, and turn small biological signals into streams of data. Each and every one of them has to operate safely and precisely where the human body is least forgiving of error.

This month we decided to use industrial CT to examine four examples that define this new frontier: a smart ring, a continuous glucose monitor, an on-body injector, and a hearing aid. They all reflect different branches of a fusion between medical and consumer design. These devices measure, treat us, or enhance our abilities, but they all ultimately rely on the same discipline of building trust through engineering excellence.

A photo of the item before transitioning to the CT scan display.

Smart Ring

Oura, 2025

Oura's titanium ring compresses a complete wellness computer into a 2.55-mm cross-section. Sensors, batteries, antennas, and control electronics all live on a continuous band with no seams or screws. Every component has to follow the ring's curve without creating pressure points against the skin or compromising the seal that keeps water out.

Infrared photodiodes and green LEDs line the inner surface of the band, positioned against the skin to track pulse, skin temperature, and blood-volume changes. Each optical window sits behind a thin polymer layer that preserves signal clarity without introducing materials the body will reject. Because these components face inward, the titanium exterior remains uninterrupted.

The PCB is a curved flex circuit carrying miniature ICs, capacitors, and resistors along the ring's inner wall. Flex architecture is the only viable approach at this scale because rigid boards would crack under the repeated mechanical stress of daily wear. The scan shows how tightly the circuit population is spaced to fit within a cross-section measured in millimeters.

The charging coil sits along the inner wall of the band, coupling wirelessly with the base charger to transfer energy through the titanium housing without direct electrical contact or openings in the shell. The CT scan reveals a fine copper trace wound in a multilayer pattern, maximizing inductive efficiency within a cross-section where every fraction of a millimeter is already spoken for.

A custom-shaped lithium-polymer cell fills the remaining interior volume, contoured to follow the ring's profile. Potting material encapsulates both the battery and PCB, sealing them against moisture and keeping the assembly stable under the mechanical stress of continuous wear. The result is a device rated for showers and workouts without any external ports or covers.

A photo of the item before transitioning to the CT scan display.

Continuous Glucose Monitor

Dexcom, 2025

The Dexcom G7 packs sensing, wireless transmission, and power management into a sealed, single-use patch worn for up to 10 days. It samples glucose continuously through interstitial fluid and transmits readings in real time to a smartphone or dedicated reader. The design constraint is unforgiving: the device has to maintain sterility and skin contact across ten days of movement, sweat, and sleep without a single user intervention.

At the sensor's base, a hair-thin flexible filament extends into subcutaneous tissue to reach the interstitial fluid, where glucose concentration tracks closely enough with blood levels to support treatment decisions. The CT scan reveals the deployment channel and insertion mechanism that drives the filament to a consistent depth and angle on every application.

A copper antenna traces the inner perimeter of the housing, enabling low-power Bluetooth transmission through the enclosure to a paired device. The geometry is optimized for transmission efficiency within tight size constraints: reliable data transfer every five minutes, across ten days, on a single zinc-air cell.

A zinc-air coin cell sits at the center of the assembly, sealed against moisture within the housing. It carries enough charge to power both the sensing and wireless systems across the full ten-day wear period. Its central position distributes weight evenly across the adhesive pad.

The PCB handles sensor amplification, data conversion, and wireless control on a flexible substrate that keeps the assembly thin enough to sit unobtrusively against the skin. The CT view shows the density of surface-mount components and signal traces packed into a form factor smaller than a quarter, a layout that has to sustain continuous data streaming for the entire time the device is in use.

A photo of the item before transitioning to the CT scan display.

On-Body Injector

Omnipod, 2022

This wearable injector fits a miniature pump, control electronics, and power source into a disposable housing about the size of a matchbox. Where the glucose monitor samples passively, the Omnipod acts. It automatically delivers a programmed drug dose over several hours, driven entirely by internal mechanics. Our CT scan opens up what makes that possible: a spring-loaded needle, lead-screw piston, and ratcheting gear train.

The injection needle sits beneath a hinged door, held by a spring-loaded actuator until triggered. On activation, it drives a soft plastic cannula through the skin to establish the drug path, then retracts, leaving the cannula in place. The CT view shows the mechanical latch and guide channels that keep the needle aligned and the insertion sterile through every stage of the cycle.

The central reservoir connects to a plunger advanced by a leadscrew, metering insulin delivery in precise increments with each actuation. An O-ring seal keeps the piston tight against the reservoir walls. The result is a steady, predictable infusion rate that holds regardless of how the wearer moves or orients the device.

The Omnipod's drive mechanism trades the mechanical spring found in conventional pumps for a nitinol shape memory alloy wire. Electrical current heats the wire, triggering a phase change that contracts it. As it cools, it expands. That repeating motion drives a gear assembly which rotates the leadscrew and advances the plunger in precise steps. The CT scan shows the gear train that converts wire motion into the controlled linear travel that meters each dose.

Three coin cell batteries power a compact control board carrying the drive IC, sensors, and timing circuitry. The board fires current through the SMA wire at programmed intervals, stepping the plunger through the full dose on a fixed schedule. Nothing is recharged or replaced mid-use because the electronics are sized to last exactly as long as the disposable housing they live in.

A photo of the item before transitioning to the CT scan display.

Hearing Aid

Jabra Enhance Select 50, 2024

The Jabra Enhance Select 50 is easy to mistake for an earbud, and the comparison is not entirely wrong. It packs microphones, processors, a battery, and a wireless charging coil into a housing smaller than your fingertip. The difference lies in what it has to do: all-day wear, precise acoustic processing, and enough reliability that the person wearing it stops thinking about it entirely.

The primary PCB carries a dual-microphone array that feeds environmental sound to an onboard digital signal processor. The processor filters background noise and isolates speech in real time. Keeping the microphones on the same board as the processing hardware minimizes the signal path and the latency that would otherwise make amplified sound feel disconnected from the world producing it.

A second circuit layer handles charging, battery protection, and signal routing, connected to the primary board through micro-flex jumpers visible in the scan. Separating audio and power onto distinct boards keeps electrical interference out of the signal path, where it would show up as distortion in the amplified sound. The power board manages the draw from the size 312 hearing aid battery that keeps the device running through a full day of wear.

The charging coil sits at the base of the unit, forming the electromagnetic link with the case charger. Wireless energy transfer through the sealed enclosure eliminates the physical connectors that would otherwise accumulate corrosion from daily contact with sweat and moisture. The coil is sized to recharge the microbattery fully within the case overnight.

The earpiece houses the miniature receiver that delivers processed sound to the ear canal, connected to the main electronics by a fine wire. Flexible seals keep moisture out of the acoustic chamber. The CT scan shows the chamber geometry directly: the dimensions that determine how the receiver's output translates into what the wearer actually hears.

Taken together, these wearables show the porous boundary between manufacturing and biology. Electronics, sensors, and power systems now share the same micro-scale precision once limited to implants. Every feature, from coil to seal, must function at human tolerance. The next generation of devices will blur the line even further, turning wearables from something we put on into something that we no longer notice at all.

Learn more about how engineers are ensuring quality in these critical devices.