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      Low Power Contactless Bioimpedance Sensor for Monitoring Breathing Activity †

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          Abstract

          An electronic circuit for contactless detection of impedance changes in a tissue is presented. It operates on the principle of resonant frequency change of the resonator having the observed tissue as a dielectric. The operating frequency reflects the tissue dielectric properties (i.e., the tissue composition and on the tissue physiological changes). The sensor operation was tested within a medical application by measuring the breathing of a patient, which was an easy detectable physiological process. The advantage over conventional contact bioimpedance measurement methods is that no direct contact between the resonator and the body is required. Furthermore, the sensor’s wide operating range, ability to adapt to a broad range of measured materials, fast response, low power consumption, and small outline dimensions enables applications not only in the medical sector, but also in other domains. This can be extended, for example, to food industry or production maintenance, where the observed phenomena are reflected in dynamic dielectric properties of the observed object or material.

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          Dielectric Properties of Biological Substances — Tabulated

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            Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) in applications related to lung and ventilation: a review of experimental and clinical activities.

            I Frerichs (2000)
            This review article is a summary of the publications dealing with the pulmonary applications of electrical impedance tomography (EIT). Original papers on EIT lung imaging published over 15 years are analysed and several aspects of the performed EIT measurements summarized. Information on the type of the EIT device and electrodes used, the studied transverse thoracic planes, the data acquisition rate, the number of studied animals, normal subjects or patients, the kind of lung pathology, the performed ventilatory manoeuvres and other interventions, as well as the applied reference techniques, is given. The type of the generated pulmonary EIT images and the quantitative analysis of the EIT data are described. Finally, the major results achieved are presented, followed by an analysis of the perspectives of EIT in clinical applications. A comparative analysis of the EIT hardware and the quality of the evaluation tools was not performed.
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              Water: Promising Opportunities For Tunable All-dielectric Electromagnetic Metamaterials

              We reveal an outstanding potential of water as an inexpensive, abundant and bio-friendly high-refractive-index material for creating tunable all-dielectric photonic structures and metamaterials. Specifically, we demonstrate thermal, mechanical and gravitational tunability of magnetic and electric resonances in a metamaterial consisting of periodically positioned water-filled reservoirs. The proposed water-based metamaterials can find applications not only as cheap and ecological microwave devices, but also in optical and terahertz metamaterials prototyping and educational lab equipment.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                Sensors (Basel)
                Sensors (Basel)
                sensors
                Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
                MDPI
                1424-8220
                16 March 2021
                March 2021
                : 21
                : 6
                : 2081
                Affiliations
                Computer Systems Department, Jožef Stefan Institute, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia; marko@ 123456pavlin.si (M.P.); franc.novak@ 123456ijs.si (F.N.)
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: gregor.papa@ 123456ijs.si
                [†]

                This paper is our extended conference paper “Towards noninvasive bioimpedance sensor design based on wide bandwidth ring resonator” published in Proceedings of the 2015 38th International Convention on Information and Communication Technology, Electronics and Microelectronics (MIPRO), Opatija, Croatia, 25–29 May 2015.

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0623-0865
                Article
                sensors-21-02081
                10.3390/s21062081
                7999750
                33809602
                fc704bab-904f-44c7-a225-4f53728cf630
                © 2021 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 11 February 2021
                : 11 March 2021
                Categories
                Article

                Biomedical engineering
                bioimpedance sensor,resonator,permittivity measurement,low power
                Biomedical engineering
                bioimpedance sensor, resonator, permittivity measurement, low power

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