Feasibility Study and Design of a Wearable System-on-a-Chip Pulse Radar for Contactless Cardiopulmonary Monitoring.

Typeset version

 

TY  - JOUR
  - Zito D, Pepe D, Neri B, Zito F, De Rossi D, Lanata A
  - 2008
  - January
  - International journal of telemedicine and applications
  - Feasibility Study and Design of a Wearable System-on-a-Chip Pulse Radar for Contactless Cardiopulmonary Monitoring.
  - Validated
  - ()
  - A new system-on-a-chip radar sensor for next-generation wearable wireless interface applied to the human health care and safeguard is presented. The system overview is provided and the feasibility study of the radar sensor is presented. In detail, the overall system consists of a radar sensor for detecting the heart and breath rates and a low-power IEEE 802.15.4 ZigBee radio interface, which provides a wireless data link with remote data acquisition and control units. In particular, the pulse radar exploits 3.1-10.6 GHz ultra-wideband signals which allow a significant reduction of the transceiver complexity and then of its power consumption. The operating principle of the radar for the cardiopulmonary monitoring is highlighted and the results of the system analysis are reported. Moreover, the results obtained from the building-blocks design, the channel measurement, and the ultra-wideband antenna realization are reported.
  - 10.1155/2008/328597
DA  - 2008/01
ER  - 
@article{V107694993,
   = {Zito D,  Pepe D and  Neri B,  Zito F and  De Rossi D,  Lanata A },
   = {2008},
   = {January},
   = {International journal of telemedicine and applications},
   = {Feasibility Study and Design of a Wearable System-on-a-Chip Pulse Radar for Contactless Cardiopulmonary Monitoring.},
   = {Validated},
   = {()},
   = {{A new system-on-a-chip radar sensor for next-generation wearable wireless interface applied to the human health care and safeguard is presented. The system overview is provided and the feasibility study of the radar sensor is presented. In detail, the overall system consists of a radar sensor for detecting the heart and breath rates and a low-power IEEE 802.15.4 ZigBee radio interface, which provides a wireless data link with remote data acquisition and control units. In particular, the pulse radar exploits 3.1-10.6 GHz ultra-wideband signals which allow a significant reduction of the transceiver complexity and then of its power consumption. The operating principle of the radar for the cardiopulmonary monitoring is highlighted and the results of the system analysis are reported. Moreover, the results obtained from the building-blocks design, the channel measurement, and the ultra-wideband antenna realization are reported.}},
   = {10.1155/2008/328597},
  source = {IRIS}
}
AUTHORSZito D, Pepe D, Neri B, Zito F, De Rossi D, Lanata A
YEAR2008
MONTHJanuary
JOURNAL_CODEInternational journal of telemedicine and applications
TITLEFeasibility Study and Design of a Wearable System-on-a-Chip Pulse Radar for Contactless Cardiopulmonary Monitoring.
STATUSValidated
TIMES_CITED()
SEARCH_KEYWORD
VOLUME
ISSUE
START_PAGE
END_PAGE
ABSTRACTA new system-on-a-chip radar sensor for next-generation wearable wireless interface applied to the human health care and safeguard is presented. The system overview is provided and the feasibility study of the radar sensor is presented. In detail, the overall system consists of a radar sensor for detecting the heart and breath rates and a low-power IEEE 802.15.4 ZigBee radio interface, which provides a wireless data link with remote data acquisition and control units. In particular, the pulse radar exploits 3.1-10.6 GHz ultra-wideband signals which allow a significant reduction of the transceiver complexity and then of its power consumption. The operating principle of the radar for the cardiopulmonary monitoring is highlighted and the results of the system analysis are reported. Moreover, the results obtained from the building-blocks design, the channel measurement, and the ultra-wideband antenna realization are reported.
PUBLISHER_LOCATION
ISBN_ISSN
EDITION
URL
DOI_LINK10.1155/2008/328597
FUNDING_BODY
GRANT_DETAILS