Title :
Benefits of Coherent Low-IF for Vital Signs Monitoring Using Doppler Radar
Author :
Mostafanezhad, Isar ; Boric-Lubecke, O.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Univ. of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, USA
Abstract :
Homodyne receiver systems have been used extensively in wireless life signs monitoring applications. The main advantage of a homodyne system is range correlation resulting in cancellation of the oscillator phase noise. However, direct down-conversion to dc and the subsequent baseband amplification circuit will introduce additional flicker noise to the signal. Physiological signals have significant content around dc that will make them susceptible to 1/f noise. A coherent low-IF system is applied to solve this problem. This architecture has the range correlation benefits of the homodyne system, while minimizing the baseband flicker noise. Measurements on a mechanical target and a human subject demonstrate a signal-to-noise ratio improvement of 7 dB, which can increase the range of operation by 50%. Measurements on a human subject have demonstrated low-IF heart rate detection with a root-mean-square error of less than 0.8 beats/min at a distance of almost 3 m with transmit power of 0.1 mW, whereas direct conversion architecture output completely failed in this case.
Keywords :
1/f noise; CW radar; Doppler radar; correlation methods; flicker noise; medical signal processing; patient monitoring; physiology; radar signal processing; telemedicine; 1/f noise; Doppler radar; baseband flicker noise minimization; coherent low-IF system; direct down-conversion; homodyne receiver systems; low-IF heart rate detection; oscillator phase noise cancellation; physiological signals; range correlation benefits; root-mean-square error; signal-to-noise ratio improvement; subsequent baseband amplification circuit; vital signs monitoring; wireless life signs monitoring applications; Baseband; Doppler radar; Mixers; Receivers; Signal to noise ratio; Doppler radar; low-IF; physiological signals;
Journal_Title :
Microwave Theory and Techniques, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMTT.2014.2346151