783 research outputs found

    Wireless Power Transfer For Biomedical Applications

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    In this research wireless power transfer using near-field inductive coupling is studied and investigated. The focus is on delivering power to implantable biomedical devices. The objective of this research is to optimize the size and performance of the implanted wireless biomedical sensors by: (1) proposing a hybrid multiband communication system for implantable devices that combines wireless communication link and power transfer, and (2) optimizing the wireless power delivery system. Wireless data and power links are necessary for many implanted biomedical devices such as biosensors, neural recording and stimulation devices, and drug delivery and monitoring systems. The contributions from this research work are summarized as follows: 1. Development of a combination of inductive power transfer and antenna system. 2. Design and optimization of novel microstrip antenna that may resonate at different ultra-high frequency bands including 415 MHz, 905 MHz, and 1300MHz. These antennas may be used to transfer power through radiation or send/receive data. 3. Design of high-frequency coil (13.56 MHz) to transfer power and optimization of the parameters for best efficiency. 4. Study of the performance of the hybrid antenna/coil system at various depths inside a body tissue model. 5. Minimizing the coupling effect between the coil and the antenna through addressed by optimizing their dimensions. 6. Study of the effects of lateral and angular misalignment on a hybrid compact system consisting of coil and antenna, as well as design and optimize the coilĂąs geometry which can provide maximum power efficiency under misalignment conditions. 7. Address the effects of receiver bending of a hybrid power transfer and communication system on the communication link budget and the transmitted power. 8. Study the wireless power transfer safety and security systems

    Wide Band Embedded Slot Antennas for Biomedical, Harsh Environment, and Rescue Applications

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    For many designers, embedded antenna design is a very challenging task when designing embedded systems. Designing Antennas to given set of specifications is typically tailored to efficiently radiate the energy to free space with a certain radiation pattern and operating frequency range, but its design becomes even harder when embedded in multi-layer environment, being conformal to a surface, or matched to a wide range of loads (environments). In an effort to clarify the design process, we took a closer look at the key considerations for designing an embedded antenna. The design could be geared towards wireless/mobile platforms, wearable antennas, or body area network. Our group at UT has been involved in developing portable and embedded systems for multi-band operation for cell phones or laptops. The design of these antennas addressed single band/narrowband to multiband/wideband operation and provided over 7 bands within the cellular bands (850 MHz to 2 GHz). Typically the challenge is: many applications require ultra wide band operation, or operate at low frequency. Low frequency operation is very challenging if size is a constraint, and there is a need for demonstrating positive antenna gain

    User-interactive wirelessly-communicating “smart” textiles made from multimaterial fibers

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    En raison de la nature intime des interactions homme-textiles (essentiellement, nous sommes entourĂ©s par les textiles 24/7 - soit sous la forme de vĂȘtements que nous portons ou comme rembourrage dans nos voitures, maisons, bureaux, etc.), les textiles intelligents sont devenus des plates-formes de plus en plus attrayantes pour les rĂ©seaux de capteurs innovants biomĂ©dicaux, transducteurs, et des microprocesseurs dĂ©diĂ©s Ă  la surveillance continue de la santĂ©. En mĂȘme temps, l'approche commune dans le domaine des textiles intelligents consiste en l'adaptation de la microĂ©lectronique planaire classique Ă  une sorte de substrat souple. Cela se traduit souvent par de mauvaises propriĂ©tĂ©s mĂ©caniques et donc des compromis au niveau du confort et de l'acceptation des usagers, qui Ă  leur tour peuvent probablement expliquer pourquoi ces solutions Ă©mergent rarement du laboratoire et, Ă  l'exception de certains cas trĂšs spĂ©cifiques, ne soit pas utilisĂ©s dans la vie de tous les jours. Par ailleurs, nous assistons prĂ©sentement Ă  un changement de paradigme au niveau de l'informatique autonome classique vers le concept de calculs distribuĂ©s (ou informatique en nuage). Dans ce cas, la puissance de calcul du nƓud individuel ou d'un dispositif de textile intelligent est moins importante que la capacitĂ© de transmettre des donnĂ©es Ă  l'Internet. Dans ce travail, je propose une nouvelle approche basĂ©e sur l'intĂ©gration de polymĂšre, verre et mĂ©tal dans des structures de fibres miniaturisĂ©es afin de rĂ©aliser des dispositifs de textiles intelligents de prochaine gĂ©nĂ©ration avec des fonctionnalitĂ©s de niveau supĂ©rieur (comme la communication sans fil, la reconnaissance tactile, les interconnexions Ă©lectriques) tout en ayant une forme minimalement envahissante. Tout d'abord, j'Ă©tudie diffĂ©rents modĂšles d'antennes compatibles avec la gĂ©omĂ©trie des fibres et des techniques de fabrication. Ensuite, je dĂ©montre expĂ©rimentalement que ces antennes en fibres multi-matĂ©riaux peuvent ĂȘtre intĂ©grĂ©es dans les textiles lors d’un processus standard de fabrication de textiles. Les tests effectuĂ©s sur ces textiles ont montrĂ© que, pour les scĂ©narios «sur-corps et hors-corps», les propriĂ©tĂ©s Ă©missives en termes de perte de retour (S11), le patron (diagramme) de radiation, l'efficacitĂ© (gain), et le taux d'erreur binaire (TEB) sont directement comparables Ă  des solutions classiques rigides. Ces antennes sont adĂ©quates pour les communications Ă  courte portĂ©e des applications de communications sans fil ayant un dĂ©bit de donnĂ©es de Mo/s (mĂ©ga-octets par seconde) (via protocoles Bluetooth et IEEE 802.15.4 Ă  la frĂ©quence de 2,4 GHz). Des simulations numĂ©riques de taux d'absorption spĂ©cifique dĂ©montrent Ă©galement le plein respect des rĂšgles de sĂ©curitĂ© imposĂ©es par Industrie Canada pour les rĂ©seaux sans fil Ă  proximitĂ© du corps humain. Puisque les matĂ©riaux composites de fibres mĂ©tal-verre-polymĂšre sont fabriquĂ©s en utilisant des fibres de silice creuses de diamĂštre submillimĂ©trique et la technique de dĂ©pĂŽt d'argent Ă  l'Ă©tat liquide, les Ă©lĂ©ments conducteurs sont protĂ©gĂ©s de l'environnement et ceci prĂ©serve aussi les propriĂ©tĂ©s mĂ©caniques et esthĂ©tiques des vĂȘtements. Cet aspect est confirmĂ© par des essais correspondant aux normes de l'industrie du textile, l'Ă©tirement standard et des essais de flexion. De plus, appliquer des revĂȘtements superhydrophobes (WCA = 152Âș, SA = 6Âș) permet une communication sans fil sans interruption de ces textiles sous l'application directe de l'eau, mĂȘme aprĂšs plusieurs cycles de lavage. Enfin, le prototype de textile intelligent fabriquĂ© interagit avec l'utilisateur Ă  travers un dĂ©tecteur tactile et transmet les donnĂ©es tactiles Ă  travers le protocole Bluetooth Ă  un smartphone. Cette dĂ©monstration valide l’approche des fibres multi-matĂ©riaux pour une variĂ©tĂ© d'applications.As we are surrounded by textiles 24/7, either in the form of garments that we wear or as upholstery in our cars, homes, offices, etc., textiles are especially attractive platforms for arrays of innovative biomedical sensors, transducers, and microprocessors dedicated, among other applications, to continuous health monitoring. In the same time, the common approach in the field of smart textiles consists in adaptation of conventional planar microelectronics to some kind of flexible substrate, which often results in poor mechanical properties and thus compromises wearing comfort and complicates garment care, which results in low user acceptance. This explains why such solutions rarely emerge from the lab and, with the exception of some very specific cases, cannot be seen in the everyday life. Furthermore, we are currently witnessing a global shift from classical standalone computing to the concept of distributed computation (e.g. so-called thin clients and cloud storage). In this context, the computation power of the individual node or smart textile device in this case, becomes progressively less important than the ability to relay data to the Internet. In this work, I propose a novel approach based on the idea of integration of polymer, glass and metal into miniaturized fiber structures in order to achieve next-generation smart textile devices with higher-level functionalities, such as wireless communication, touch recognition, electrical interconnects, with minimally-invasive attributes. First, I investigate different possible fiber-shaped antenna designs and fabrication techniques. Next, I experimentally demonstrate that such multi-material fiber antennas can be integrated into textiles during standard textile manufacturing process. Tests conducted on these textiles have shown that, for on-body and off-body scenarios, the emissive properties in terms of return loss (S11), radiation pattern, efficiency (gain), and bit-error rate (BER) are directly comparable to classic ‘rigid’ solutions and adequately address short-range wireless communications applications at Mbps data-rates (via Bluetooth and IEEE 802.15.4 protocols at 2.4 GHz frequency). Numerical simulations of the specific absorption rate (SAR) also demonstrate full compliance with safety regulations imposed by Industry Canada for wireless body area network devices. Since metal-glass-polymer fiber composites were fabricated using sub-millimetre hollow-core silica fibers and liquid state silver deposition technique, the conductor elements are shielded against the environment and preserve the mechanical and cosmetic properties of the garments. This is confirmed by the textile industry standard stretching and bending tests. Additionally, applied superhydrophobic coatings (WCA=152Âș, SA=6Âș) allow uninterrupted wireless communication of the textiles under direct water application even after multiple washing cycles. Finally, I fabricated a user-interactive and wireless-communicating smart textile prototype, that interacts with the user through capacitive touch-sensing and relays the touch data through Bluetooth protocol to a smartphone. This demonstration validates that the proposed approach based on multi-material fibers is suitable for applications to sensor fabrics and bio-sensing textiles connected in real time to mobile communications infrastructures, suitable for a variety of health and life science applications

    RF energy harvesters for wireless sensors, state of the art, future prospects and challenges: a review

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    The power consumption of portable gadgets, implantable medical devices (IMDs) and wireless sensor nodes (WSNs) has reduced significantly with the ongoing progression in low-power electronics and the swift advancement in nano and microfabrication. Energy harvesting techniques that extract and convert ambient energy into electrical power have been favored to operate such low-power devices as an alternative to batteries. Due to the expanded availability of radio frequency (RF) energy residue in the surroundings, radio frequency energy harvesters (RFEHs) for low-power devices have garnered notable attention in recent times. This work establishes a review study of RFEHs developed for the utilization of low-power devices. From the modest single band to the complex multiband circuitry, the work reviews state of the art of required circuitry for RFEH that contains a receiving antenna, impedance matching circuit, and an AC-DC rectifier. Furthermore, the advantages and disadvantages associated with various circuit architectures are comprehensively discussed. Moreover, the reported receiving antenna, impedance matching circuit, and an AC-DC rectifier are also compared to draw conclusions towards their implementations in RFEHs for sensors and biomedical devices applications

    2008 Index IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology Vol. 16

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    This index covers all technical items - papers, correspondence, reviews, etc. - that appeared in this periodical during the year, and items from previous years that were commented upon or corrected in this year. Departments and other items may also be covered if they have been judged to have archival value. The Author Index contains the primary entry for each item, listed under the first author\u27s name. The primary entry includes the coauthors\u27 names, the title of the paper or other item, and its location, specified by the publication abbreviation, year, month, and inclusive pagination. The Subject Index contains entries describing the item under all appropriate subject headings, plus the first author\u27s name, the publication abbreviation, month, and year, and inclusive pages. Note that the item title is found only under the primary entry in the Author Index

    2009 Index IEEE Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters Vol. 8

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    This index covers all technical items - papers, correspondence, reviews, etc. - that appeared in this periodical during the year, and items from previous years that were commented upon or corrected in this year. Departments and other items may also be covered if they have been judged to have archival value. The Author Index contains the primary entry for each item, listed under the first author\u27s name. The primary entry includes the coauthors\u27 names, the title of the paper or other item, and its location, specified by the publication abbreviation, year, month, and inclusive pagination. The Subject Index contains entries describing the item under all appropriate subject headings, plus the first author\u27s name, the publication abbreviation, month, and year, and inclusive pages. Note that the item title is found only under the primary entry in the Author Index

    A Novel Power-Efficient Wireless Multi-channel Recording System for the Telemonitoring of Electroencephalography (EEG)

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    This research introduces the development of a novel EEG recording system that is modular, batteryless, and wireless (untethered) with the supporting theoretical foundation in wireless communications and related design elements and circuitry. Its modular construct overcomes the EEG scaling problem and makes it easier for reconfiguring the hardware design in terms of the number and placement of electrodes and type of standard EEG system contemplated for use. In this development, portability, lightweight, and applicability to other clinical applications that rely on EEG data are sought. Due to printer tolerance, the 3D printed cap consists of 61 electrode placements. This recording capacity can however extend from 21 (as in the international 10-20 systems) up to 61 EEG channels at sample rates ranging from 250 to 1000 Hz and the transfer of the raw EEG signal using a standard allocated frequency as a data carrier. The main objectives of this dissertation are to (1) eliminate the need for heavy mounted batteries, (2) overcome the requirement for bulky power systems, and (3) avoid the use of data cables to untether the EEG system from the subject for a more practical and less restrictive setting. Unpredictability and temporal variations of the EEG input make developing a battery-free and cable-free EEG reading device challenging. Professional high-quality and high-resolution analog front ends are required to capture non-stationary EEG signals at microvolt levels. The primary components of the proposed setup are the wireless power transmission unit, which consists of a power amplifier, highly efficient resonant-inductive link, rectification, regulation, and power management units, as well as the analog front end, which consists of an analog to digital converter, pre-amplification unit, filtering unit, host microprocessor, and the wireless communication unit. These must all be compatible with the rest of the system and must use the least amount of power possible while minimizing the presence of noise and the attenuation of the recorded signal A highly efficient resonant-inductive coupling link is developed to decrease power transmission dissipation. Magnetized materials were utilized to steer electromagnetic flux and decrease route and medium loss while transmitting the required energy with low dissipation. Signal pre-amplification is handled by the front-end active electrodes. Standard bio-amplifier design approaches are combined to accomplish this purpose, and a thorough investigation of the optimum ADC, microcontroller, and transceiver units has been carried out. We can minimize overall system weight and power consumption by employing battery-less and cable-free EEG readout system designs, consequently giving patients more comfort and freedom of movement. Similarly, the solutions are designed to match the performance of medical-grade equipment. The captured electrical impulses using the proposed setup can be stored for various uses, including classification, prediction, 3D source localization, and for monitoring and diagnosing different brain disorders. All the proposed designs and supporting mathematical derivations were validated through empirical and software-simulated experiments. Many of the proposed designs, including the 3D head cap, the wireless power transmission unit, and the pre-amplification unit, are already fabricated, and the schematic circuits and simulation results were based on Spice, Altium, and high-frequency structure simulator (HFSS) software. The fully integrated head cap to be fabricated would require embedding the active electrodes into the 3D headset and applying current technological advances to miniaturize some of the design elements developed in this dissertation

    Ultra Wideband

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    Ultra wideband (UWB) has advanced and merged as a technology, and many more people are aware of the potential for this exciting technology. The current UWB field is changing rapidly with new techniques and ideas where several issues are involved in developing the systems. Among UWB system design, the UWB RF transceiver and UWB antenna are the key components. Recently, a considerable amount of researches has been devoted to the development of the UWB RF transceiver and antenna for its enabling high data transmission rates and low power consumption. Our book attempts to present current and emerging trends in-research and development of UWB systems as well as future expectations

    A Printed Wearable Dual-Band Antenna for Wireless Power Transfer

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    In this work, a dual-band printed planar antenna, operating at two ultra-high frequency bands (2.5 GHz/4.5 GHz), is proposed for wireless power transfer for wearable applications. The receiving antenna is printed on a Kapton polyimide-based flexible substrate, and the transmitting antenna is on FR-4 substrate. The receiver antenna occupies 2.1 cm2 area. Antennas were simulated using ANSYS HFSS software and the simulation results are compared with the measurement results

    Wideband and UWB antennas for wireless applications. A comprehensive review

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    A comprehensive review concerning the geometry, the manufacturing technologies, the materials, and the numerical techniques, adopted for the analysis and design of wideband and ultrawideband (UWB) antennas for wireless applications, is presented. Planar, printed, dielectric, and wearable antennas, achievable on laminate (rigid and flexible), and textile dielectric substrates are taken into account. The performances of small, low-profile, and dielectric resonator antennas are illustrated paying particular attention to the application areas concerning portable devices (mobile phones, tablets, glasses, laptops, wearable computers, etc.) and radio base stations. This information provides a guidance to the selection of the different antenna geometries in terms of bandwidth, gain, field polarization, time-domain response, dimensions, and materials useful for their realization and integration in modern communication systems
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