Starting from the physical evidence that passive RFID systems may be used as self-sensing devices, the feasibility of human monitoring by means of implanted tags is here investigated. The sensing capabilities, the backscattering contrast and the communication link are analyzed considering a specific medical application, i.e. the continuous monitoring of brain edema evolution in patients neurosurgery treated. By using numerical simulations all the significant issues of the passive sensing are here investigated at different frequency bands. Preliminary experimental results with simplified phantoms corroborate the analysis.
Occhiuzzi, C., Marrocco, G. (2010). Sensing the human body by implanted RFID tags. ??????? it.cilea.surplus.oa.citation.tipologie.CitationProceedings.prensentedAt ??????? European conference on antennas and propagation EUCAP-2010, Barcellona (Spagna).
Sensing the human body by implanted RFID tags
Occhiuzzi, C;MARROCCO, GAETANO
2010-04-20
Abstract
Starting from the physical evidence that passive RFID systems may be used as self-sensing devices, the feasibility of human monitoring by means of implanted tags is here investigated. The sensing capabilities, the backscattering contrast and the communication link are analyzed considering a specific medical application, i.e. the continuous monitoring of brain edema evolution in patients neurosurgery treated. By using numerical simulations all the significant issues of the passive sensing are here investigated at different frequency bands. Preliminary experimental results with simplified phantoms corroborate the analysis.Questo articolo è pubblicato sotto una Licenza Licenza Creative Commons