| Literature DB >> 26610508 |
Chin-Lung Yang1, Gou-Tsun Zheng2.
Abstract
This study proposes using wireless low power thermal sensors for basal-body-temperature detection using frequency modulated telemetry devices. A long-term monitoring sensor requires low-power circuits including a sampling circuit and oscillator. Moreover, temperature compensated technologies are necessary because the modulated frequency might have additional frequency deviations caused by the varying temperature. The temperature compensated oscillator is composed of a ring oscillator and a controlled-steering current source with temperature compensation, so the output frequency of the oscillator does not drift with temperature variations. The chip is fabricated in a standard Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) 0.18-μm complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) process, and the chip area is 0.9 mm². The power consumption of the sampling amplifier is 128 µW. The power consumption of the voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) core is less than 40 µW, and the output is -3.04 dBm with a buffer stage. The output voltage of the bandgap reference circuit is 1 V. For temperature measurements, the maximum error is 0.18 °C with a standard deviation of ±0.061 °C, which is superior to the required specification of 0.1 °C.Entities:
Keywords: basal body temperature; implantable fractal dental antenna; temperature compensated voltage-controlled oscillator; thermal sensor
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26610508 PMCID: PMC4701344 DOI: 10.3390/s151129467
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Block diagram of the wireless BBT measurement system.
Figure 2Proposed dental fractal antennas in BBT system (a) Hilbert fractal structure; (b) Simulation result of the antenna return loss; (c) Whole miniature 3D dental antenna structure; (d) radiation pattern.
Figure 3Active bridge circuit for the thermal sensor readout circuit.
Figure 4VCO with a temperature compensation circuit.
Figure 5Measurement of the output voltage with Rtemp.
Figure 6Measured output frequency operating in the 400-MHz band.
Figure 7Measurement setup of the temperature-monitoring system. (a) Overall measurement diagram; (b) Measurement setup picture.
Figure 8Comparison of the measured and actual temperatures.