Title :
A 2-to-16GHz 204mW 3mm-resolution stepped-frequency radar for breast-cancer diagnostic imaging in 65nm CMOS
Author :
Caruso, Michele ; Bassi, Matteo ; Bevilacqua, Andrea ; Neviani, Andrea
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Padova, Padua, Italy
Abstract :
Radar imaging is gaining interest for medical, security, and industrial applications. Enabled by the advances in silicon technologies, a clear trend towards higher integration is observed [1-3]. Early-stage breast cancer detection is a promising application for radar imaging, as first clinical trials with patients have been carried out [4]. Commercial VNAs have been used in these experiments, but custom hardware is needed to improve the sensitivity, and to decrease the size and the cost of the setup [4]. Medical radar imaging sets great challenges. The radiation must be coupled into the body, while the skin acts as a shield. The waves that penetrate beyond the skin are heavily attenuated (>80dB for a few centimeters at 10GHz [4]). Tumor cells have different electrical properties than the healthy tissue, thus reflecting the waves and allowing for detection; this contrast is frequency dependent, decreasing at higher frequencies. These fundamental limits result in a radar requiring a dynamic range in excess to 100dB [4], and force operation in the lower-GHz range. In contrast, mm-Waves would be preferred to achieve higher resolution [1]. Ultra-wideband radars combine larger scattered energy collected at lower frequencies (thus higher SNR), and mm-range resolution, since the resolution is set by the overall bandwidth and the antenna array arrangement [2].
Keywords :
CMOS analogue integrated circuits; antenna arrays; cancer; image resolution; medical image processing; millimetre wave radar; radar antennas; radar imaging; ultra wideband radar; VNA; antenna array arrangement; breast cancer diagnostic imaging; early-stage breast cancer detection; electrical properties; frequency 2 GHz to 16 GHz; industrial application; medical application; medical radar imaging; mm-range resolution; mm-waves; power 204 mW; scattered energy; security application; silicon technologies; size 65 nm; stepped-frequency radar; tumor cells; ultrawideband radars; Harmonic analysis; Imaging; Mixers; Noise measurement; Power harmonic filters; Radar imaging;
Conference_Titel :
Solid-State Circuits Conference Digest of Technical Papers (ISSCC), 2013 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-4515-6
DOI :
10.1109/ISSCC.2013.6487717