Healthcare Technology Letters | |
RF communication with implantable wireless device: effects of beating heart on performance of miniature antenna | |
article | |
Olive H. Murphy1  Alessandro Borghi1  Mohammad Reza Bahmanyar1  Christopher N. McLeod1  Manoraj Navaratnarajah1  Magdi Yacoub1  Christofer Toumazou1  | |
[1] Department of Electrical Engineering, Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Centre for Bio-Inspired Technology, Imperial College London;Heart Science Centre, Harefield Hospital | |
关键词: wearable antennas; cardiology; biomedical communication; wideband implantable antennas; posthumous autopsy; cardiovascular pressure sensor; dynamic reflection coefficients; human heart; surrounding environment; power losses; wireless implantable sensor; implantable antenna; frequency response; miniature antenna; beating heart effects; implantable wireless device; RF communication; | |
DOI : 10.1049/htl.2014.0066 | |
学科分类:肠胃与肝脏病学 | |
来源: Wiley | |
【 摘 要 】
The frequency response of an implantable antenna is key to the performance of a wireless implantable sensor. If the antenna detunes significantly, there are substantial power losses resulting in loss of accuracy. One reason for detuning is because of a change in the surrounding environment of an antenna. The pulsating anatomy of the human heart constitutes such a changing environment, so detuning is expected but this has not been quantified dynamically before. Four miniature implantable antennas are presented (two different geometries) along with which are placed within the heart of living swine the dynamic reflection coefficients. These antennas are designed to operate in the short range devices frequency band (863–870 MHz) and are compatible with a deeply implanted cardiovascular pressure sensor. The measurements recorded over 27 seconds capture the effects of the beating heart on the frequency tuning of the implantable antennas. When looked at in the time domain, these effects are clearly physiological and a combination of numerical study and posthumous autopsy proves this to be the case, while retrospective simulation confirms this hypothesis. The impact of pulsating anatomy on antenna design and the need for wideband implantable antennas is highlighted.
【 授权许可】
CC BY|CC BY-ND|CC BY-NC|CC BY-NC-ND
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202107100001107ZK.pdf | 639KB | download |