S. Y. Huang et al., "Microstrip Line-Based Glucose Sensor for Noninvasive Continuous Monitoring Using the Main Field for Sensing and Multivariable Crosschecking," in IEEE Sensors Journal, vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 535-547, 15 Jan.15, 2019. doi: 10.1109/JSEN.2018.2877691
Abstract:
Microstrip line (MLIN)-based glucose sensors have been used for noninvasive glucose monitoring. However, the current MLIN-based solutions do not provide enough sensitivity. The reason for this is that they rely on the fringing field of an MLIN, which leads to a shallow penetration depth and thus low sensitivity. In this paper, we propose a sensitive MLINbased glucose sensor using the main field. The idea is illustrated using the following three steps. Step 1 is sensing the glucose level by using the main field, which uses the material under test (MUT) as the substrate of an MLIN terminated with a load; Step 2 is identifying the contribution of different parameters and different components of parameters to sensitivity, which leads to Step 3, in which different parameters and/or different components of parameters are crosschecked for sensing. Two frequency bands, 100MHz to 500MHz and 1.4 GHz to 1.9 GHz, were investigated. In Step 1, the main field configuration was compared to its fringing field counterpart. It is shown that the proposed MLIN configuration presents an average sensitivity of 1:8×10–3 dB/(mg/dL) in terms of the reflection coefficient, which is more than 10 times higher than that of its counterpart. In Step 2, different components of the reflection coefficient and the input impedance of the proposed configuration were examined, and their diverse contributions to the sensitivity were shown, which allows crosschecking to improve sensing accuracy. This was successfully shown in Step 3, in which algorithms for crosschecking were proposed, and the sensing accuracy was examined. In terms of the optimal sensing frequency band, 1.4 GHz to 1.9 GHz shows higher sensitivity than 100MHzto 500 MHz, where the molecules may interact the most with the waves. This implies that the interaction between a wave and the sensing structure with the MUT contributes more to sensitivity than the direct interaction between the wave and the MUT. The RF safety of the proposed configuration was examined by checking the specific absorption rate (SAR) of the MUT with the proposed structure. This study offers a new avenue for the development of an MLINbased noninvasive glucose sensor for continuous monitoring with high sensitivity in the near future. It can be used both as a single sensor and in a multiple-sensor glucose monitoring system.