JOURNAL ARTICLE

Wearable Wireless Telemetry System for Implantable Bio-MEMS Sensors

Rainee N. SimonsFélix A. MirandaJeffrey D. WilsonRenita E. Simons

Year: 2006 Journal:   Conference proceedings   Publisher: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers

Abstract

Telemetry systems of a type that have been proposed for the monitoring of physiological functions in humans would include the following subsystems: Surgically implanted or ingested units that would comprise combinations of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS)- based sensors [bioMEMS sensors] and passive radio-frequency (RF) readout circuits that would include miniature loop antennas. Compact radio transceiver units integrated into external garments for wirelessly powering and interrogating the implanted or ingested units. The basic principles of operation of these systems are the same as those of the bioMEMS-sensor-unit/external-RFpowering- and-interrogating-unit systems described in "Printed Multi-Turn Loop Antennas for Biotelemetry" (LEW-17879-1) NASA Tech Briefs, Vol. 31, No. 6 (June 2007), page 48, and in the immediately preceding article, "Hand-Held Units for Short-Range Wireless Biotelemetry" (LEW-17483-1). The differences between what is reported here and what was reported in the cited prior articles lie in proposed design features and a proposed mode of operation. In a specific system of the type now proposed, the sensor unit would comprise mainly a capacitive MEMS pressure sensor located in the annular region of a loop antenna (more specifically, a square spiral inductor/ antenna), all fabricated as an integral unit on a high-resistivity silicon chip. The capacitor electrodes, the spiral inductor/antenna, and the conductor lines interconnecting them would all be made of gold. The dimensions of the sensor unit have been estimated to be about 110.4 mm. The external garment-mounted powering/ interrogating unit would include a multi-turn loop antenna and signal-processing circuits. During operation, this external unit would be positioned in proximity to the implanted or ingested unit to provide for near-field, inductive coupling between the loop antennas, which we have as the primary and secondary windings of an electrical transformer.

Keywords:
Telemetry Wearable computer Microelectromechanical systems Electrical engineering Antenna (radio) Wireless Chip Omnidirectional antenna Transformer Electronic engineering Engineering Acoustics Computer science Embedded system Materials science Physics Telecommunications Voltage Optoelectronics

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FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
10
Refs
0.16
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Citation History

Topics

Wireless Power Transfer Systems
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Energy Harvesting in Wireless Networks
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Wireless Body Area Networks
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering

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