4.6 Article

Characterization of Open-Ended Coaxial Probe Sensing Depth with Respect to Aperture Size for Dielectric Property Measurement of Heterogeneous Tissues

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22030760

Keywords

open-ended coaxial probe; dielectric property measurement; skin tissue; sensing depth; phantom materials; broadband dielectric property retrieval

Funding

  1. Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey [118S074]
  2. COST Action [CA17115]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The open-ended coaxial probe (OECP) method is frequently used for microwave dielectric property (DP) characterization of high permittivity and conductivity materials. However, the method suffers from high measurement error, with tissue heterogeneity being a major contributor. It has been found that using probes with smaller aperture sizes can increase measurement accuracy.
The open-ended coaxial probe (OECP) method is frequently used for the microwave dielectric property (DP) characterization of high permittivity and conductivity materials due to inherent advantages including minimal sample preparation requirements and broadband measurement capabilities. However, the OECP method is known to suffer from high measurement error. One well-known contributor to the high error rates is tissue heterogeneity, which can potentially be managed through the selection of a probe with a proper sensing depth (SD). The SD of the OECP is dependent on many factors including sample DPs and probe aperture diameter. Although the effects of sample DPs on SD have been investigated to some extent in the literature, the probe aperture diameters, particularly small diameters, have not been fully explored. To this end, the SDs of probes with three different apertures (0.5, 0.9 and 2.2 mm-diameters) were analyzed in this study. Probes' SDs were first investigated with simulations using a double-layered sample configuration (skin tissue and olive oil). Next, experiments were performed using a commercial OECP with a 2.2 mm aperture diameter. The SD was categorized based on 5%, 20% and 80% DP change. Among these threshold values, a 5% DP change was selected as the benchmark for SD categorization. The findings suggest that probes with a smaller aperture size and correspondingly smaller SD should be utilized when measuring the DPs of thin and multilayered samples, such as healthy and diseased skin tissues, to increase the measurement accuracy.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available