250 research outputs found

    Communication system for a tooth-mounted RF sensor used for continuous monitoring of nutrient intake

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    In this Thesis, the communication system of a wearable device that monitors the user’s diet is studied. Based in a novel RF metamaterial-based mouth sensor, different decisions have to be made concerning the system’s technologies, such as the power source options for the device, the wireless technology used for communications and the method to obtain data from the sensor. These issues, along with other safety rules and regulations, are reviewed, as the first stage of development of the Food-Intake Monitoring projectOutgoin

    Portable Bio-Devices: Design of Electrochemical Instruments from Miniaturized to Implantable Devices

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    The integration of biosensors and electronic technologies allows the development of biomedical systems able to diagnose and monitoring pathologies by detecting specific biomarkers. The chapter presents the main modules involved in the development of such devices, generically represented in Fig. 1, and focuses its attention on the essential components of these systems to address questions such as: how is the device powered? How does it communicate the measured data? What kind of sensors could be used?, and What kinds of electronics are used

    A programmable microsystem using system-on-chip for real-time biotelemetry

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    A telemetry microsystem, including multiple sensors, integrated instrumentation and a wireless interface has been implemented. We have employed a methodology akin to that for System-on-Chip microelectronics to design an integrated circuit instrument containing several "intellectual property" blocks that will enable convenient reuse of modules in future projects. The present system was optimized for low-power and included mixed-signal sensor circuits, a programmable digital system, a feedback clock control loop and RF circuits integrated on a 5 mm × 5 mm silicon chip using a 0.6 μm, 3.3 V CMOS process. Undesirable signal coupling between circuit components has been investigated and current injection into sensitive instrumentation nodes was minimized by careful floor-planning. The chip, the sensors, a magnetic induction-based transmitter and two silver oxide cells were packaged into a 36 mm × 12 mm capsule format. A base station was built in order to retrieve the data from the microsystem in real-time. The base station was designed to be adaptive and timing tolerant since the microsystem design was simplified to reduce power consumption and size. The telemetry system was found to have a packet error rate of 10<sup>-</sup><sup>3</sup> using an asynchronous simplex link. Trials in animal carcasses were carried out to show that the transmitter was as effective as a conventional RF device whilst consuming less power

    Advanced sensors technology survey

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    This project assesses the state-of-the-art in advanced or 'smart' sensors technology for NASA Life Sciences research applications with an emphasis on those sensors with potential applications on the space station freedom (SSF). The objectives are: (1) to conduct literature reviews on relevant advanced sensor technology; (2) to interview various scientists and engineers in industry, academia, and government who are knowledgeable on this topic; (3) to provide viewpoints and opinions regarding the potential applications of this technology on the SSF; and (4) to provide summary charts of relevant technologies and centers where these technologies are being developed

    Remote System for Monitoring Animal Models With Single-Metabolite Bio-Nano-Sensors

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    A novel system for remote monitoring of metabolism in an animal model is proposed in this paper. The system is obtained by integrating bio-nano-sensors to detect single- metabolites, an electrochemical front-end made with off-the-shelf components, a radio frequency communication sub-system, and an antenna of new design. The system has been calibrated and tested for continuous monitoring of four different metabolites: glucose, lactate, glutamate, and adenosine triphosphate. Tests using animal models (mice) have been conducted to investigate tissue inflammation induced by the implanted bio-nano-sensors. These tests confirm that our system is suitable and reliable for remote monitoring of single-metabolites in experiments with animal models

    Mobility based energy efficient and multi-sink algorithms for consumer home networks

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    With the fast development of the Internet, wireless communications and semiconductor devices, home networking has received significant attention. Consumer products can collect and transmit various types of data in the home environment. Typical consumer sensors are often equipped with tiny, irreplaceable batteries and it therefore of the utmost importance to design energy efficient algorithms to prolong the home network lifetime and reduce devices going to landfill. Sink mobility is an important technique to improve home network performance including energy consumption, lifetime and end-to-end delay. Also, it can largely mitigate the hot spots near the sink node. The selection of optimal moving trajectory for sink node(s) is an NP-hard problem jointly optimizing routing algorithms with the mobile sink moving strategy is a significant and challenging research issue. The influence of multiple static sink nodes on energy consumption under different scale networks is first studied and an Energy-efficient Multi-sink Clustering Algorithm (EMCA) is proposed and tested. Then, the influence of mobile sink velocity, position and number on network performance is studied and a Mobile-sink based Energy-efficient Clustering Algorithm (MECA) is proposed. Simulation results validate the performance of the proposed two algorithms which can be deployed in a consumer home network environment

    Design and implementation of a microstrip filter biosensor for healthcare applications

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    PhD ThesisThe aim of this research was to develop high-frequency biosensors by a combination of traditional microstrip filters and microfluidics. Lowpass and bandpass microstrip filters were designed for operational frequencies less than 3 GHz. Analytical modelling was used to initially determine microstrip filter geometry and then 3D electromagnetic simulation software utilised to examine their performance. Once the design was optimised, devices were fabricated using traditional PCB manufacturing approaches and clean room evaporation techniques. The fabricated filters were compared with the simulation results. The characteristic filter features at 0.66 GHz, 0.80 GHz, and 1.60 GHz demonstrated good agreement to within 90% of the simulated models. Microfluidic reservoirs were then attached to the microstrip filters prior to biological testing. The targeted biomolecules for detection were prostate specific antigen (PSA). A vector network analyser was used to measure the S-parameters of the filters at each stage of functionalisation and immobilisation. Biosensor performance was assessed by measurement of the resonant amplitude and frequency shifts at the characteristic operational frequencies as a function of concentration of the immobilised PSA. The efficacy test of the produced biosensors demonstrated label-free detection down to a minimum analyte concentration of 6.125 ng/ml, this corresponding to an amplitude change of 9 dB and a frequency shift of 10 MHz in the characteristic feature of the S11 signal. This work has demonstrated the applicability of both lowpass and bandpass microstrip filters, with an operational frequency range less than 3 GHz and with suitably integrated microfluidics, to perform as biosensors. This is the first experimental assessment report of this type of radio frequency-based biosensor showing the real-time detection of PSA biomarkers

    Low power CMOS IC, biosensor and wireless power transfer techniques for wireless sensor network application

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    The emerging field of wireless sensor network (WSN) is receiving great attention due to the interest in healthcare. Traditional battery-powered devices suffer from large size, weight and secondary replacement surgery after the battery life-time which is often not desired, especially for an implantable application. Thus an energy harvesting method needs to be investigated. In addition to energy harvesting, the sensor network needs to be low power to extend the wireless power transfer distance and meet the regulation on RF power exposed to human tissue (specific absorption ratio). Also, miniature sensor integration is another challenge since most of the commercial sensors have rigid form or have a bulky size. The objective of this thesis is to provide solutions to the aforementioned challenges

    Data Acquisition Applications

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    Data acquisition systems have numerous applications. This book has a total of 13 chapters and is divided into three sections: Industrial applications, Medical applications and Scientific experiments. The chapters are written by experts from around the world, while the targeted audience for this book includes professionals who are designers or researchers in the field of data acquisition systems. Faculty members and graduate students could also benefit from the book

    Une plate-forme sans fil pour electrochimique spectroscopie d'impédance

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    Avec l’émergence soutenue de capteurs et de dispositifs électrochimiques innovants, la spectroscopie d'impédance électrochimique est devenue l'un des outils les plus importants pour la caractérisation et la modélisation de la matière ionique et de l'interfaçage des capteurs. La capacité de détecter automatiquement, à l’aide de dispositifs électrochimiques peu couteux, les caractéristiques physiques et chimiques de la matière ionique ouvre une gamme d’application très variée pour la compréhension et l’optimisation des procédés ou interviennent les processus électrochimiques. Cette thèse décrit le développement d’une plate-forme microélectronique miniaturisée, connectée, multiplexée, et à faible coût pour la spectroscopie d'impédance diélectrique (SID) conçue pour les mesures électrochimiques in-situ et adaptée aux architectures de réseau sans fil. La plate-forme développée durant ce travail de maitrise a été testée et validée au sein d’une maille ZigBee et a été en mesure d'interfacer jusqu'à trois capteurs SID en même temps et de relayer l'information à travers le net Zigbee pour l'analyse de données et le stockage. Le système a été construit à partir de composants microélectroniques disponibles commercialement et bénéficie des avantages d'une calibration système on-the-fly qui effectue la calibration du capteur de manière aisée. Dans ce mémoire de maitrise, nous rapportons la modélisation et la caractérisation de senseurs électrochimiques de nitrate; notamment nous décrivons la conception microélectronique, la réponse d'impédance de Nyquist, la sensibilité et la précision de la mesure électrochimique, et les résultats de tests de la plate-forme pour les applications de spectroscopie d'impédance relatives à la détection du nitrate, de la détection de la qualité de l'eau, et des senseurs tactiles.The emergence of the various applications of electrochemical sensors and devices, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy became one of the most important tools for characterizing and modeling of the material and interfacing the sensors. The ability to sense in an automatic manner enables a wide variety of processes to be better understood and optimized cost-effectively. This thesis describes the development of a low-cost, miniaturized, multiplexed, and connected platform for dielectric impedance spectroscopy (DIS) designed for in-situ measurements and adapted to wireless network architectures. The platform has been tested and used as a DIS sensor node on a ZigBee mesh and was able to interface up to three DIS sensors at the same time and relay the information through the Zigbee net for data analysis and storage. The system was built from commercial microelectronics components and benefits from an on-the-fly calibration system that makes sensor calibration easy. The thesis reports characterizing and modeling of two electro-chemical devices (i.e. nitrate sensor and optically-transparent electrically-conductive glasses) and also describes the microelectronics design, the Nyquist impedance response, the measurement sensitivity and accuracy, and the testing of the platform for in-situ dielectric impedance spectroscopy applications pertaining to fertilizer sensing, water quality sensing, and touch sensing
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