Quantitative and multiparametric blood analysis is of great clinical importance in cardiovascular disease diagnosis. Although there are various methods to extract blood information, they often require invasive procedures, lack continuity, involve bulky instruments, or have complicated testing procedures. Flexible sensors can realize on-skin assessment of several vital signals, but generally exhibit limited function to monitor blood characteristics.
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June 2021
Photoacoustic (PA) imaging is becoming more attractive because it can obtain high-resolution and high-contrast images through merging the merits of optical and acoustic imaging. High sensitivity receiver is required in deep in-vivo PA imaging due to detecting weak and noisy ultrasound signal. A novel photoacoustic receiver system-on-chip (SoC) with coherent detection (CD) based on the early-and-late acquisition and tracking is developed and first fabricated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor precise health status monitoring and accurate disease diagnostics in the current COVID-19 pandemic, it is essential to detect various kinds of target signals robustly under high noise and strong interferences. Moreover, the health monitoring system is preferred to be realized in a small form factor for convenient mass deployments. A CMOS-integrated coherent sensing platform is proposed to achieve the goal, which synergetically leverages quadrature coherent photoacoustic (PA) detection and coherent radar sensing for achieving universal healthcare.
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December 2019
Monolithic integration of photoacoustic (PA) sensor with compact size, lightweight, and low power consumption is attractive to be implemented on wearable medical devices for in vivo blood metabolic sensing and imaging. This work presents a miniaturized chip-scale mixed-signal photoacoustic sensor system which can achieve coherent lock-in function to detect weak target PA signals noninvasively at in vivo scenarios of poor signal to noise ratio (SNR) and strong interferences. A low-noise amplifier (LNA), a 3rd order Butterworth low-pass filter (LPF), and a variable-gain amplifier (VGA) chain with 10 MHz cutoff frequency are implemented on-chip to attain a high-quality sensing performance with 50-dB dynamic range.
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