A Novel Method of Transmission Enhancement and Misalignment Mitigation between Implant and External Antennas for Efficient Biopotential Sensing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Prior Art
- A physical approximation of the infinite ground requires a large antenna plane, which is not feasible for small domain applications, such as biosensing. Therefore, we need to investigate what the superstrate can offer in transmission for finite size grounds.
- The replacement of the reflecting sheet with the superstrate adds another unknown, which is the thickness of the superstrate, which is needed to be optimized for practical and finite sized patches.
- With the increase of superstrate permittivity, transmission will enhance but only up to a given maximum superstrate permittivity.
- Insertion of metamaterial imprints on low permittivity superstrates can produce the optimum performance at a higher permittivity. This tool can be specially useful since practical high permittivity materials are not always commercially available, and they provide relatively large dispersive loss.
- The insertion of the dielectric material turns the gap into a dielectric waveguide channel, where some of the leaky waves can reflect into the channel and increase the number of reflections (see Figure 1b), and possibly overall transmission.
- The effective wavelength distance will be , being the permittivity of the gap filled material. Hence, the system can be miniaturized, which is always desirable in implementation of biosensing systems.
3. Examining Transmission Enhancement
3.1. Simulation Systems
- Step 1: First, we take note of the transmission loss for the two systems, without any engineering in between. For system 1, the two antennas are separated by a wavelength distance in air mm at 4.8 GHz For system 2, the medium boundary is placed at a distance mm from the external antenna. The internal antenna is buried further mm inside (see Figure 2a).
- Step 2: Since the air-superstrate cavity needs to have a half-wavelength distance, we place a superstrate material at a distance mm above antenna 1, for both systems. The location of the antennas will remain unchanged (see Figure 2b). From there on, we vary the superstrate dielectric constant () and take note of the transmission characteristics.
- Step 3: Next, we fill the gap between the patch and the superstrate with a dielectric having . To maintain the same half wavelength cavity, the new air-superstrate gap is now mm (see Figure 2c). In this way, although the distance between the antenna and the superstrate is reduced, the overall distance is the same if measured in wavelengths. We again vary the dielectric constant of the superstrate to observe the transmission performance.
- Step 4: Finally, we insert circular ring metamaterial imprints on both sides of the superstrate for a relatively low to induce high permittivity substrate transmission from the previous step.
3.2. Antenna Pairs
3.3. Transmission Analysis
- With the inclusion of the superstrate material, the transmission improves, but only up to a certain limit.
- Filling up the patch-superstrate gap with dielectric material further enhances the transmission.
4. Implementation: A Passive Neurosensing System
4.1. Antenna Design
4.2. Performance Analysis
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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System 1 | System 2 | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 | , | , , |
, | , | |
Step 2 | , | , , |
, | , | |
Step 3 | , | , , |
, | , | |
Step 4 | , | , , |
, | , |
Reference | Operating Frequency | Maximum | External Antenna Surface | Implant Antenna Surface |
---|---|---|---|---|
[3] | ≈4.8 GHz | dB | 145 mm diameter | |
( dB in simulation) | ||||
[28] | GHz | dB | same as the external | |
, etc. | antenna | |||
[29] | GHz | dB | N/A | |
[30] | ≈4.8 GHz | dB | ||
[31] | 400 MHz () GHz | dB | N/A | |
[32] | 400 MHz | dB | N/A | |
proposed design | GHz | dB (in HFSS) | ||
dB (in CST) |
Misalignment along x | Misalignment along y | ||
---|---|---|---|
Axis | Axis | ||
Distance (mm) | degradation (dB) | Distance (mm) | degradation (dB) |
5 | 5 | ||
10 | 10 |
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Islam, M.S.; Kiourti, A.; Islam, M.A. A Novel Method of Transmission Enhancement and Misalignment Mitigation between Implant and External Antennas for Efficient Biopotential Sensing. Sensors 2021, 21, 6730. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21206730
Islam MS, Kiourti A, Islam MA. A Novel Method of Transmission Enhancement and Misalignment Mitigation between Implant and External Antennas for Efficient Biopotential Sensing. Sensors. 2021; 21(20):6730. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21206730
Chicago/Turabian StyleIslam, Md Shifatul, Asimina Kiourti, and Md Asiful Islam. 2021. "A Novel Method of Transmission Enhancement and Misalignment Mitigation between Implant and External Antennas for Efficient Biopotential Sensing" Sensors 21, no. 20: 6730. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21206730
APA StyleIslam, M. S., Kiourti, A., & Islam, M. A. (2021). A Novel Method of Transmission Enhancement and Misalignment Mitigation between Implant and External Antennas for Efficient Biopotential Sensing. Sensors, 21(20), 6730. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21206730