Title :
Sensing Depth of Microwave Radiation for Internal Body Temperature Measurement
Author :
Scheeler, Robert ; Kuester, Edward F. ; Popovic, Zoya
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr., Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO, USA
Abstract :
This paper investigates modeling of the interaction of human tissues with a probe antenna situated on the surface of the skin. The goal is to differentiate temperature changes at different depths under the skin for passive radiometric measurements of internal body temperature. An improved metric is defined in order to differentiate thermal power radiated from a specific part of the tissue relative to the total thermal power received by the probe antenna. The frequency range between 0.5 and 3 GHz is investigated due to the sensing depth that can be achieved for a given receiver sensitivity. The general approach is to validate full-wave finite element method (FEM) EM simulations with a spectral-domain analysis for layered lossy dielectrics with a dipole at the interface between two of the layers. This was successfully done for a dipole on a water half-space and a stack of three tissues (skin, fat, and muscle). A new type of multifrequency probe was designed for 1.4, 2.7, and 4.9 GHz operation, and the predicted impedance validated experimentally. To the authors´ knowledge, this is the first time that the near-field received power of a dipole probe placed in contact with lossy layered media is examined as a function of frequency. This is shown to be significantly different than the plane wave case, and is necessary knowledge for the design of a portable radiometer for microwave internal body thermometry.
Keywords :
dipole antennas; finite element analysis; inhomogeneous media; microwave antennas; radiometry; skin; spectral-domain analysis; temperature measurement; FEM; dipole probe; finite element method; frequency 0.5 GHz to 3 GHz; frequency 4.9 GHz; human tissues; internal body temperature measurement; layered lossy dielectrics; lossy layered media; microwave internal body thermometry; microwave radiation; passive radiometric measurements; probe antenna; receiver sensitivity; sensing depth; skin surface; spectral-domain analysis; Microwave antennas; Microwave measurement; Microwave radiometry; Probes; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; Biological tissues; dipole antennas; electromagnetic propagation in absorbing media; microwave radiometry; multilayered media; spectral domain analysis;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAP.2013.2295595