Abstract:
The modern times are witnessing an unparallel impact of the advancement in the field of
information technology on the overall medical care. However, there is still strong around
the globe desire to further raise the healthcare standards. Consequently, the research
community is pushed to strive for efficient and inexpensive means of automating the
healthcare processes. Radio frequency identification (RFID) tags capable of integrating
sensing, data storage and communication functionalities in one unit are pivotal for such
automation. The present thesis, a small step towards digitalizing the healthcare, explores
the utilization of RFID tags for improving the direct (patient) and indirect (non-patient)
care processes.
Wireless body-centric communication systems, providing a wireless and maintenancefree
link between the human body and the surrounding, are the linchpin of the modernday
personalized healthcare applications. Antennas are as pertinent to this direct care
system as the eyes and ears are to the human body. The core of the research thesis is the
design of efficient body-centric RFID tag antennas to boost the wireless healthcare
applications. The antennas operate in the microwave band (2.4–2.48 GHz) that is in line
with the high data rate requirements of the healthcare processes. In the course of the
research work, a wearable antenna for off-body communication and an implantable
antenna for in-body communication are designed and tested. The concerned body organ
in both the cases is the human arm. The dielectric behavior of the human arm is
integrated into simulations through a three-layered numerical phantom, whereas practical
measurements utilize a non-homogeneous tissue-mimicking gel phantom. The proposed
tag antennas fulfill the required attributes such as low-cost, low profile, miniature and
biocompatible, along with countering the dielectric challenges of the human body. The
wearable antenna needs to be immune to the on-body impedance detuning and radiation
efficiency degradation. On the other hand, implanted antenna should have sufficient gain
to establish the in-body wireless communication link. These challenges are the primary
focus, as well as the contribution of the thesis.
The thesis also highlights the design of inexpensive chipless RFID tags that finds scope
in monitoring and management of low-cost medical inventory items (indirect care). The
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tags encode data into the frequency domain using multi-resonant structures. A broad
frequency spectrum is utilized to achieve high data capacity. The integrated broadband
transmitting and receiving antennas enhances the read range of the tag. The proposed
chipless tag is a useful contribution to facilitate the vision of broad scale deployment of
RFID in healthcare systems.