• DocumentCode
    3603552
  • Title

    Chest-Worn Health Monitor Based on a Bistatic Self-Injection-Locked Radar

  • Author

    Fu-Kang Wang ; You-Rung Chou ; Yen-Chen Chiu ; Tzyy-Sheng Horng

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. Eng., Nat. Sun Yat-Sen Univ., Kaohsiung, Taiwan
  • Volume
    62
  • Issue
    12
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    2931
  • Lastpage
    2940
  • Abstract
    This paper presents wearable health monitors that are based on continuous-wave Doppler radar technology. To achieve low complexity, low power consumption, and simultaneous wireless transmission of Doppler information, the radar architecture is bistatic with a self-injection-locked oscillator (SILO) tag and an injection-locked oscillator (ILO)-based frequency demodulator. In experiments with a prototype that was operated in the medical body area network and the industrial scientific and medical bands from 2.36 to 2.484 GHz, the SILO tag is attached to the chest of a subject to transform the movement of the chest due to cardiopulmonary activity and body exercise into a transmitted frequency-modulated wave. The tag consumes a very low power of 4.4 mW. The ILO-based frequency demodulator, located 30 cm from the subject, receives and processes this wave to yield the waveform that is associated with the movement of the chest. Following further digital signal processing, the cardiopulmonary activity and body exercise are displayed as time-frequency spectrograms. Promisingly, the experimental results that are presented in this paper reveal that the proposed health monitor has high potential to integrate a cardiopulmonary sensor, a pedometer, and a wireless transmission device on a single radar platform.
  • Keywords
    Doppler radar; FM radar; biomedical telemetry; body area networks; cardiology; demodulators; injection locked oscillators; medical signal processing; patient monitoring; radar signal processing; ILO-based frequency demodulator; SILO tag; bistatic radar architecture; bistatic self-injection-locked radar; cardiopulmonary activity; cardiopulmonary sensor; chest-worn health monitor; continuous-wave Doppler radar technology; digital signal processing; frequency 2.36 GHz; frequency 2.484 GHz; frequency-modulated wave; injection-locked oscillator-based frequency demodulator; medical bands; medical body area network; pedometer; power 4.4 mW; power consumption; single radar platform; time-frequency spectrograms; wireless transmission device; Biomedical monitoring; Demodulation; Doppler radar; Monitoring; Radar antennas; Spectrogram; Bistatic self-injection-locked (SIL) radar; Doppler continuous-wave radar; Wearable health monitor; bistatic self-injection-locked (SIL) radar; cardiopulmonary sensor; pedometer; time-frequency spectrogram; wearable health monitor; wireless transmission; wireless transmission.;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9294
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TBME.2015.2453255
  • Filename
    7152845