WO2015174879A1 - Mm-wave radar vital signs detection apparatus and method of operation - Google Patents
Mm-wave radar vital signs detection apparatus and method of operation Download PDFInfo
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- WO2015174879A1 WO2015174879A1 PCT/RS2015/000011 RS2015000011W WO2015174879A1 WO 2015174879 A1 WO2015174879 A1 WO 2015174879A1 RS 2015000011 W RS2015000011 W RS 2015000011W WO 2015174879 A1 WO2015174879 A1 WO 2015174879A1
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01S—RADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
- G01S13/00—Systems using the reflection or reradiation of radio waves, e.g. radar systems; Analogous systems using reflection or reradiation of waves whose nature or wavelength is irrelevant or unspecified
- G01S13/88—Radar or analogous systems specially adapted for specific applications
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61B—DIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
- A61B5/00—Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
- A61B5/02—Detecting, measuring or recording pulse, heart rate, blood pressure or blood flow; Combined pulse/heart-rate/blood pressure determination; Evaluating a cardiovascular condition not otherwise provided for, e.g. using combinations of techniques provided for in this group with electrocardiography or electroauscultation; Heart catheters for measuring blood pressure
- A61B5/0205—Simultaneously evaluating both cardiovascular conditions and different types of body conditions, e.g. heart and respiratory condition
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61B—DIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
- A61B5/00—Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
- A61B5/05—Detecting, measuring or recording for diagnosis by means of electric currents or magnetic fields; Measuring using microwaves or radio waves
- A61B5/0507—Detecting, measuring or recording for diagnosis by means of electric currents or magnetic fields; Measuring using microwaves or radio waves using microwaves or terahertz waves
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01S—RADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
- G01S13/00—Systems using the reflection or reradiation of radio waves, e.g. radar systems; Analogous systems using reflection or reradiation of waves whose nature or wavelength is irrelevant or unspecified
- G01S13/02—Systems using reflection of radio waves, e.g. primary radar systems; Analogous systems
- G01S13/50—Systems of measurement based on relative movement of target
- G01S13/58—Velocity or trajectory determination systems; Sense-of-movement determination systems
- G01S13/583—Velocity or trajectory determination systems; Sense-of-movement determination systems using transmission of continuous unmodulated waves, amplitude-, frequency-, or phase-modulated waves and based upon the Doppler effect resulting from movement of targets
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01S—RADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
- G01S7/00—Details of systems according to groups G01S13/00, G01S15/00, G01S17/00
- G01S7/003—Transmission of data between radar, sonar or lidar systems and remote stations
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01S—RADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
- G01S7/00—Details of systems according to groups G01S13/00, G01S15/00, G01S17/00
- G01S7/02—Details of systems according to groups G01S13/00, G01S15/00, G01S17/00 of systems according to group G01S13/00
- G01S7/03—Details of HF subsystems specially adapted therefor, e.g. common to transmitter and receiver
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01S—RADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
- G01S7/00—Details of systems according to groups G01S13/00, G01S15/00, G01S17/00
- G01S7/02—Details of systems according to groups G01S13/00, G01S15/00, G01S17/00 of systems according to group G01S13/00
- G01S7/35—Details of non-pulse systems
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01S—RADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
- G01S7/00—Details of systems according to groups G01S13/00, G01S15/00, G01S17/00
- G01S7/02—Details of systems according to groups G01S13/00, G01S15/00, G01S17/00 of systems according to group G01S13/00
- G01S7/41—Details of systems according to groups G01S13/00, G01S15/00, G01S17/00 of systems according to group G01S13/00 using analysis of echo signal for target characterisation; Target signature; Target cross-section
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01Q—ANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
- H01Q19/00—Combinations of primary active antenna elements and units with secondary devices, e.g. with quasi-optical devices, for giving the antenna a desired directional characteristic
- H01Q19/10—Combinations of primary active antenna elements and units with secondary devices, e.g. with quasi-optical devices, for giving the antenna a desired directional characteristic using reflecting surfaces
- H01Q19/108—Combination of a dipole with a plane reflecting surface
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01Q—ANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
- H01Q21/00—Antenna arrays or systems
- H01Q21/06—Arrays of individually energised antenna units similarly polarised and spaced apart
- H01Q21/061—Two dimensional planar arrays
- H01Q21/062—Two dimensional planar arrays using dipole aerials
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01Q—ANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
- H01Q23/00—Antennas with active circuits or circuit elements integrated within them or attached to them
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61B—DIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
- A61B2503/00—Evaluating a particular growth phase or type of persons or animals
- A61B2503/04—Babies, e.g. for SIDS detection
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61B—DIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
- A61B2503/00—Evaluating a particular growth phase or type of persons or animals
- A61B2503/40—Animals
Definitions
- the required system should be usable in various application scenarios. Ideally, advanced heartbeat and respiratory rate sensor system is needed, being non-invasive, ideally contactless, easy to deploy, practical, user friendly, and low-cost.
- EP 1350460 "Vital sign detection sensor and sensor controlling device", of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., introduces system attached to human body.
- Vital sign detector introduces the system attached to human body with attached communication circuits.
- WO 2010040452 "Apparatus for recording and monitoring at least one vital sign of a person in a motor vehicle", of Fraunhofer, introduces optoelectronic sensor arrangement for recording at least one vital sign by means of light reflection.
- Recent patent application US 20130245437 "System and method for facilitating reflectometric detection of physiologic activity", of Advanced Telesensors, relates in various aspects to systems and methods involving reflectometric detection of physiologic activity.
- Millimeter-wave front end preferably operates in 60 GHz ISM Band.
- Fig. 7 presents event detection functional block
- Cellular long-range communication means allowing connection to personal smart phones and their applications, using one or more than one of the plurality of possible communication standards, such as UMTS, LTE, GSM, GPRS, as well as connection to a cloud application accessible via the WEB. This later connection would allow simultaneous monitoring of the set of systems, e.g. monitoring of all patients in a hospital.
- Comparison thresholds may be predefined or statistically calculated based on the stored data.
- This information may be sent to:
- FIG. 6 shows antenna printed on the opposite sides of the dielectric layer, as well as metalized reflector at the distance of approximately one quarter of the signal wavelength.
- the space between the reflector and the antenna may be empty or filled with foam.
- the antenna parts 21 and 22 are fed by the symmetrical lines printed on both sides of the dielectric approaching dipoles perpendicularly to their arrangement, as shown in the Fig. 5.
- Symmetrical strip line may be advantageously connected to differential mm-wave inputs and outputs of the entity 10 by using micro-vias produced by an advanced polymer technology. This is illustrated in of Fig. 6.
Abstract
The present invention discloses mm-wave radar sensor to be applied for detection of the vital signs of humans, particularly babies, as well as animals, in clinical and daily life environments. The key system relevant elements are the utilization of mm-wave integrated radar system, with specific planar high-gain antenna radiation pattern, with separate receive and transmit antennas, and detection of the following biomarkers: heartbeat and respiratory dynamics. The method of operation calculates the probability of a number of possible events. In case that probability is above a predefined threshold, the interaction with end user or end system is initiated, typically by using arbitrary wireless communication. Corresponding event related predefined actions are performed in that case. Preferably, the system is using 60 GHz integrated radar front end working in Doppler operation mode, with 4 x 4 TX and RX planar radiation elements, with physical size typically in the range 4 x 2 x 1 cm, or smaller.
Description
Description
MM-wave Radar Vital Signs Detection Apparatus and Method of Operation
Technical Field
The present invention relates to a contactless vital signs sensor apparatus and method of operation comprising mm-wave radio radar with two planar high-gain antenna systems, one for transmitting apd one for receiving mm-wave radio signals, utilizing information extracted from processing of both human heartbeat and breathing dynamics. In particular, this solution addresses monitoring babies and humans in general in medical, assistive living and leisure & sports environments.
Background Art
According to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), which is an agency within the US Department of Health & Human Services, data extracted from Medicare patient discharge records between 2005 through 2007, respiratory failure and failure to rescue (prevent a clinically important deterioration) were two of the three medical indicators with the highest incidence, accounting for 26% of the 97,755 reported deaths and over $1.82 billion in excess costs.
To reduce mortality, enable fast intervention, and finally to reduce the cost, the specific strategies in clinical environment are required, imposing the need for early detection of patient's condition deterioration. Practical technical and organizational solutions in clinical environment are required to meet this ultimate goal. The trends in clinical environment are that the technologies previously utilized in critical care and emergency environments are adapted to non-critical care areas in hospitals. Teams are organized to react upon early warning indicators, including changes in heartbeat and respiratory dynamics.
On the other side, solutions are needed for monitoring babies in incubators, cribs, beds, carriages, and carriers. The system allows noncontact vital signs monitoring. In case of baby incubators this would enable fast reactions of the medical staff when required. In other cases, permanent observation of the baby's vital signs is often required by the parents, as essential for proper reaction in abnormal conditions, such as sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).
Furthermore, observing the vital signs of the elderly people as a part of their assistive living programs, people in medical recovery, or during exercise and sports activities requires contactless vital signs sensors. Additionally, systems for wireless monitoring of animals' vital signs during pregnancies or illness are needed.
The required system should be usable in various application scenarios. Ideally, advanced heartbeat and respiratory rate sensor system is needed, being non-invasive, ideally contactless, easy to deploy, practical, user friendly, and low-cost.
The following application scenarios will be addressed by the proposed innovative solution:
• Contactless monitoring of baby's vital signs in incubators.
• Contactless monitoring of baby's vital signs in their cribs, beds, carriages, carriers, and generally in their living environment.
• Contactless vital signs monitoring of the people in hospital beds.
• Contactless vital signs monitoring of people in their medical recovery, assistive living, or generally living environment.
• Contactless vital signs monitoring of animals.
The state-of-the-art solutions for vital signs monitoring are based on one of the following two approaches: contact and contactless. The first group includes systems with sensors in direct contact with the human or animal body, which is in many cases impractical. There are several products available on the market based on the contact approach. The second group solutions are proposed by research papers and patents, currently without available products. Proposed systems are based on contactless optical, video or radio approach. The invention proposed here relates to the radio based contactless vital signs detection concept, with clear innovative differentiation to the state-of-the-art in this segment.
It was published in different scientific articles that microwave radar sensor, in the frequency range 3- 30GHz, may be used to detect the vital signs. Especially 2.4, 3-10, 24 and 60 GHz vital sign demonstrators have been publicly reported.
Patents and patent applications published in last several years show the relevance of the topic and the state-of-the-art, and will be presented in the following.
The following patents propose the systems based on contact detection of vital signs.
US 20130324860, "Optical Power Modulation Vital Sign Detection Method and Measurement Device", of Tarilian Laser Technologies, introduces optical system for vital signs detection.
EP 1214904, "Wrist-worn vital sign detection device", of Omron Healthcare, introduces system with contact to the human body.
EP 1350460, "Vital sign detection sensor and sensor controlling device", of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., introduces system attached to human body.
WO 2003024325, "Vital sign detector" introduces the system attached to human body with attached communication circuits.
US 20110087080, "Detection Device For Vital Signs", of Nanoident Technologies Ag, introduces body attached system which detects blood oxygen content, body temperature, skin moisture, skin conductivity and the heartbeat.
WO 2013027027, "Remote monitoring of vital signs", of Isis Innovation Limited, proposes a method of remote monitoring of vital signs by detecting the PPG (photoplethysmogram) signal in an image of a subject taken by a video camera.
WO 2010040452, "Apparatus for recording and monitoring at least one vital sign of a person in a motor vehicle", of Fraunhofer, introduces optoelectronic sensor arrangement for recording at least one vital sign by means of light reflection.
DE 102011112226, "Multi-model multi-sensor device for contact-less detection and monitoring of physiological signals of resting or active working people, has sensors for simultaneous capacitive and optoelectronic detection of physiological signals", of LifeTAix GmbH, introduces multi-model multi- sensor device comprising sensors for simultaneous capacitive and optoelectronic detection and monitoring of significant physiological signals.
The following patents propose the systems based on contactless detection of vital signs.
US 20100198083, "Random Body Movement Cancellation for Non-Contact Vital Sign Detection", of University Of Florida Research Foundation, introduces system for cancelation of the body movements by utilizing vital sign detection based on two transceivers utilizing different frequencies.
US 3796208, "Movement monitoring apparatus", of Memco Ltd, discloses an apparatus for monitoring patient movements utilizing Doppler effect with microwave radar.
US 20120209087, "Non-Contact Vital Sign Sensing System and Sensing Method Using the Same", of National Sun Yat-Sen University, Industrial Technology Research Institute, introduces a non-contact vital sign sensing system and method which sense a vital sign according to a self-injection locking (SIL) and cancel body movement interference according to a mutual injection locking (MIL).
CN 102509419, "Wireless driver fatigue monitoring device" is published, disclosing wireless monitoring device for driver fatigue, including microwave signal transmission for respiratory conditions detection of the driver, using 24 GHz radio. The system analyses the driver's breathing using wireless signal, and then converts it to a respiratory frequency. This information is compared to a preset threshold value in order to determine the fatigue.
US 4958638, "Non-contact vital signs monitor", of Georgia Tech Research Corporation, introduces basic Doppler detection principle by using single antenna radar system for TX and RX functionality combined by circulator and isolator structures, targeting microwave region, particularly 3 and 10 GHz frequency bands.
US 7811234, "Remote-sensing method and device", of California Institute of Technology, proposes system comprising the signal source and the detector which extracts from the reflected signal beam the variations in amplitude indicative of motion of the illuminated tissue or indicative of time dependent variations in the permittivity of the illuminated tissue associated with the electrical activity of the subject's heart.
Recent patent application US 20130245437, "System and method for facilitating reflectometric detection of physiologic activity", of Advanced Telesensors, relates in various aspects to systems and methods involving reflectometric detection of physiologic activity.
Summary of Invention
This invention proposes the apparatus 100 and method of operation for contactless vital sign detection, i.e. heartbeat and respiratory dynamics. The detection of the vital signs is followed by the dedicated, specific event-related actions, initiated by the same Apparatus 100. The proposed solution can save the lives of humans, particularly babies, as well as of the animals.
The key system relevant components of the proposed apparatus 100 are:
• High-gain planar antenna system, realized by the plurality of the technologies, with each of
the transmit 21 and receiving 22 parts having more than one antenna radiation element and the radiation diagram in the direction of the subject being observed.
• Millimeter-wave radar with integrated front end on silicon 10, providing analog processing of
the mm-wave signal, and the provision of the analog to digital conversion functionality;
• Digital signal processing functionality 40, having wireless communication interface with v plurality of the realization;
• Mechanical assembly with power supply interface, containing mechanically integrated
antenna, digital and analog functionalities and having mechanical connection to the baby incubator, crib, bed, carriage, or carrier, to the bed of the patient in the hospital, or to the wall or ceiling of the areas populated by the subject being observed.
• Supporting circuitry 50 as a part of apparatus 100 may include functionalities like
loudspeaker and light warning source, by the plurality of the realization options.
Millimeter-wave front end preferably operates in 60 GHz ISM Band. The usage of higher mm-wave
ISM bands is also proposed. The RX and TX antennas preferably have x 4 elements, to explore the tradeoff between the size of the antenna, having impacts on the system cost and integration in the environment, and obtaining the narrow antenna beam. The narrow antenna beam, associated with explicit high-gain antenna approach is essential part of the system, providing limited possibility that the biometric data, i.e. heartbeats or respirations, from the subjects in the vicinity of the subject being observed is sensed. This is one of the essential innovative approaches, because it dramatically decreases the complexity of the digital processing, providing simple, compact, and low-cost apparatus. This is also an essential system-related factor, which imposes the use of mm-wave signals for vital signs detections, as opposed to the state-of-the-art where utilization of microwave frequencies 3-30 GHz is proposed.
Using mm-wave frequency band, preferably the 60 GHz ISM band, allows several major system related advantages compared to the state-of-the-art utilizing microwave frequencies, for example to the 24 GHz ISM band approach proposed in CN 102509419 B:
• The capability to have smaller dimensions of the high-gain antenna systems, meaning that, for the same radiation characteristics, 6 times less antenna surface is needed. This reduces the cost and greatly improves the compactness, hence almost eliminating practical use of the system proposed in CN 102509419 B.
• The advantage of the proposed innovation is that the utilization of the higher frequency increases the resolution of the target micro displacements, in this case a human body heartbeat and respiratory dynamics. The proposed system provides at least 3 times better resolution compared to CN 102509419 B. Moreover, micro displacement may be analyzed with increased accuracy if the IQ outputs are available, as proposed.
• The advantage of the proposed innovation is that the mm-wave frequency band signals, in applications where humans are irradiated, do not penetrate the human skin. The penetration depth is significantly lower compared to the microwave frequency band, typically 3 times shallower than in the case of state of the art CN 102509419 B.
In contrast to the state-of-the-art solutions utilizing single antenna for transmission and reception, such as US 4958638 and CN 102509419 B, innovative approach proposed here explicitly operates with separate antenna systems, one for TX chain and one for RX chain, connected to the same integrated mm-wave front end 10. This allows omitting typical radio & radar system components such as circulators and isolators, which are fully impractical for any type of integration due to the size and specific realization technologies, hence prohibiting low-cost and compact product.
Presented drawbacks of the proposed solutions explain why basic principles of Doppler radar application in human and animal vital signs detection have not turned into a product, almost 30 years after the first demonstrations.
US 20100198083 and US 20120209087 proposes utilization of two transceivers operating with two distinct frequencies in order to cancel the impact of the random body movement on the vital signs detection. These systems require high complexity hardware and complex signal processing.
Smaller size of the module allows easier physical integration in the application environment. Position of the apparatus may be chosen such that it provides the direct path to the subject being observed and also allows easier manufacturing. System utilizing lower frequencies would either have larger dimensions or wider radiation beams which would allow system to "pick up" unwanted reflections.
Moreover, present invention has innovative approach of integrating complete RF functionalities of the mm-wave radar (30 - 300 GHz) within a single front end chip, including complete mm-wave frequency synthesis, fabricated in standard silicon process. This is possible because the separate antenna systems for TX and RX are used, hence avoiding the need for circulators and potentially isolators. These elements have acceptable performance only when realized using special technologies, which are inherently expensive and cannot be integrated in silicon. In contrast to CN 102509419 B and US 4958638 the presented innovation introduces digital signal processing which allows significant system advantage of using single digital processing HW for simultaneous processing of both heartbeat and respiratory dynamics. Proposed CN 102509419 B topology would require twice the processing HW complexity to process both biomarkers, has no inherent signal processing capability to filter out signals from two sources, and cannot add specific adjustments in averaging procedures, which may be required for system customization for the particular application environment.
As a significant innovation step, in contrast to the state-of-the-art, the proposed system analyses both biomarkers simultaneously, thereby providing significantly more information to the user.
The proposed apparatus 100 has significant advantages compared to the state-of-the-art, in at least of one of the following features:
• There is no physical contact to the subject of subject's clothes.
• The system functions independently of the light conditions.
• The system is inherently low-cost allowing the complete HW solution in the range less than 10$ for large quantities.
• The system is compact with inherently small thickness of typically less than 1 cm, allowing easy integration, which reduces assembly cost in the vehicle manufacturing, and allows aftermarket deployment
• The system analyzes two essential biomarkers simultaneously: heartbeat and respiratory dynamics, and therefore provides more information. This allows simultaneous analysis of both heartbeat and respiratory dynamics, providing the means for better prediction and diagnose, which may save lives.
• Proposed utilization of mm-wave frequency, such as 60 GHz ISM band or higher, do not penetrate the human body, in contrast to microwave frequency signals.
• In the applications where a number of radar sensors need to operate in the vicinity of each other sharing the same frequency, there is a problem of a sensor detecting the reflected signal which was transmitted by another sensor. This problem can be largely alleviated by utilizing highest possible frequencies, as proposed here, since those frequencies have strong propagation losses and allow high directivity of the transmitted beam.
The proposed system may function with several meters distance between the subject being observed and the apparatus, depending on the antenna arrangement, transmit power, and receiver sensitivity. The transmit power is, however, reduced to the minimum needed, for the reasons of having minimum power consumption, minimum thermal dissipation, and minimum reflection clutters, which will further simplify digital processing algorithms and further reduce the power consumption and thermal dissipation. The digital part has typical wireless interface 63, with plurality of its realizations allowing easy connection to the infrastructure accessed by the user.
Apparatus 100 could be also realized with one high gain planar antenna and isolator functionality. This may reduce the size of the system but in the same time increase the technical requirements on isolator functionality, which is difficult to release in the low cost and miniature manner.
Instead of the down conversion mixer in the integrated mm-wave chip functionality 10, the IQ demodulator may be integrated, providing some extra features in the digital signal processing.
Brief Description of Drawings
Fig. 1 presents apparatus in the specific application scenarios
Fig. 2 presents apparatus functional block diagram
Fig. 3 presents apparatus digital processing functional blocks
Fig.4 presents the block diagram of the integrated mm-wave front end
Fig. 5 presents antenna TX and RX system options with 4 and 8 dipoles
Fig. 6 presents antenna element arrangement and chip connection to the antenna feeding arrangement
Fig. 7 presents event detection functional block
Fig. 8 presents preferable integrated module 3D topology based on apparatus 100, top and lateral view, with polymer integration approach
Fig. 9 presents communication of the vital signs and event detection information to mobile device by wireless means
Fig. 10a) presents apparatus functional block diagram with one high gain antenna for both transmitting and receiving mm-wave radio signals, isolator functionality and IQ demodulator in mm-wave chip functionality 10
Fig. 10b) presents apparatus functional block diagram with one high gain antenna for both transmitting and receiving mm-wave radio signals, isolator functionality and single mixer in mm-wave chip functionality 10
Description of Embodiments
Integration of the apparatus 100 is application dependent, as illustrated in Fig. 1, and may be:
• Within the baby incubator enclosure such that the antenna is directed towards the baby
• Within the baby bed enclosure such that the antenna is directed towards the baby
• Within the baby transportation means enclosure, such as baby carriage, carrier, or car seat, such that the antenna is directed towards the baby
• Within the patient bed enclosure such that the antenna is directed towards the patient
• Within the environment enclosure in which the subject being observed resides, such as emergency car cabin, hospital, living rooms, placed e.g. on the wall or ceiling, such that the antenna is directed towards the subject being observed
Due to advantageously proposed mm-wave radar application, the size of the high-gain Antenna System for RX 21 and for TX 22 is small enough to allow practical use of the apparatus in the application environment while maintaining high-gain antenna features. Taking into account proposed 60 GHz ISM band operation, and 4 x 4 antenna elements for 21 and 22, the approximate size of the device may be less than x 2 x 1 cm, which would inherently allow practical use of the system.
The crucial block of the proposed apparatus 100 is the Integrated mm-wave front end, -System on Chip- 10. It contains the complete RF functionality, and includes power amplifier functionality attached to the antenna system 22, low noise amplifier attached to antenna system 21, integrated PLL, used both for up-conversion in transmit and down-conversion in receive, one analog pre filtered an amplified signal or providing two analog pre-filtered and amplified signals as IQ outputs to A/D conversion functionality 30. The entity 10 has test functionality, voltage regulation, and digital interface to the Controlling functionality 41, which is a part of the Digital Processing functionality 40. More detailed structure of the integrated front end 10 is given in Fig. 4, with IQ outputs. The realization with one down conversion mixer and one signal conditioning part compromising amplification and filtering, would require less space in the entity 10 and therefore less cost. The use of the integrated front end 10 allows the system to be compact and have low-cost assembly, enabling the use in the real product. Integration of the complete frequency synthesis and complete analog functionality in a single chip allows considerable reduction of the cost, which is not the case in published mm-wave systems. The entity 10 is preferably realized using SiGe BiCMOS technology that provides high performance. Alternatively CMOS technology may be used. AD (analog to digital) conversion functionality 30 converts the analog conditioned signal or two quadrature signals, I and Q, of the entity 10, and feeds digital representation of signal or signals to the Digital processing functionality 40 for further processing. Entity 30 is realized by plurality of the realization options, with sampling frequency typically under 1 MHz and typically at least 8 bit resolution for the vital signs detection applications. Entity 30 may be integrated on the same chip as Entity 10. Entity 30 may be integrated on the same chip as Entity 40. Entities 40, 10, and 30 may be all integrated on a single chip. Entity 60 is providing interface to the infrastructure by using general wired interfaces 61, and/or standardized interfaces 62, such as Home Automation, CAN or LIN standards, and/or wireless
interface 63. Wireless interface 63 allows the proposed apparatus 100 to be integrated into the "internet of things" approach.
Wireless interface 63 may be realized by one of the plurality of possible wireless communication technologies for both short- and wide-range communication, in particular:
1. Cellular long-range communication means, allowing connection to personal smart phones and their applications, using one or more than one of the plurality of possible communication standards, such as UMTS, LTE, GSM, GPRS, as well as connection to a cloud application accessible via the WEB. This later connection would allow simultaneous monitoring of the set of systems, e.g. monitoring of all patients in a hospital.
2. Short range communication means, allowing connections typically up to 100 meters, by using: a) low data rate wireless systems like Bluetooth, ZigBee, ISM band communication systems in 433, 915 MHz, 2.4 and 5.8 GHz range, and b) Wireless LAN typical applications in 2.4, 5 - 6 GHz, and 60 GHz range. Those connections may be established to the concentrators, which further communicate with the web/cloud based applications, and/or to the smart mobile devices. One possible scenario is that the information from a number of vital signal sensors is gathered, e.g. in a hospital, and transferred to the web and/or to the medical staff via smart phones. In another possible scenario the vital signs information from a sensor monitoring a baby in a crib is directly communicated to a parent's smart phone, e.g. via WLAN.
Supporting circuitry 50 optionally includes additional memory, manual switching, power supply related circuitry, mechanical support, and any additional functionality required for easy integration. Power supply related circuitry in 50 enables one of the realization options: autonomous power supply provided by the battery, or the connection to the external power supply. The mechanical support structure for integration of all functionality is preferably provided using advanced polymer technologies. Optionally, entity 50 may also include a loudspeaker or indication/warning light source/display, allowing autonomous operation.
Digital processing functionality 40 may be realized by the plurality of technologies, such as: advanced CPUs, FPGAs, advanced DSP, or ASIC, or their combinations, where the digital processing may be performed by "soft" approach or by hard-wired approach or by their combination. Preferably functionalities 60 and 40 are integrated on a simple ASIC, having CPU on one digital SOC. Digital processing functionality 40 includes functionalities 41, 421-429 and 70-71 as described in Fig. 3. The goal is to perform remote and contactless detection of the driver body movement. Important information is the micro-movement of the driver's body; therefore, the simplest approach like Doppler radar system may be used. The entity 10 sends mm-wave CW signal by Tx antenna entity 22 towards the driver's body. The radio signal of mm-wave frequency does not penetrate the clothes and the human body. Heartbeat and respirations cause body micro-movements. According to Doppler effect those movements are causing frequency modulation of the radio signal received by the antenna entity 21. After the downconversion or IQ demodulation, i.e. mixing with the quadrature of the transmitted signal, and subsequent filtering, and amplification performed in the entity 10, the low-frequency baseband signal or signals are provided to the entity 30. These analog signal or two analog signals are converted into corresponding one or two digital streams by the entity 30 and fed into the entity 40. In entity 421 additional low-pass digital filtering may be performed. Data is further provided to entities 422 and 423, which perform appropriate digital band-pass filtering such that the expected heartbeat and respiratory rates are in-band. Filter characteristics must account for the expected variations of the appropriate biomarkers which reflect normal and pathologic conditions. Filtering characteristics may be set based on the live object biomarkers history and statistics, previously stored in memory. Entities 426 and 427 perform the calculations of the heartbeat and respiration rates respectively. Filtered signals are first converted in the frequency domain. The corresponding heartbeat and respiratory rates are detected as peaks in signal spectrum. The position of the peaks determines the corresponding rate. One or the combination of the plurality of possible
peak detection methods may be utilized, with corresponding digital signal processing realizations of various possible averaging, smoothing, windowing, and peak position estimation techniques. In entities 428 and 429, the calculated rates are further processed by calculating the rate of the change of the heartbeat and respiratory rates, which may be mathematically expressed as derivatives of the corresponding biometric rates, where various averaging techniques may be applied. This information is provided to the entity 70, which is responsible for event detection.
With proposed Method of operation one or more of the following events may be detected:
• Subject is alive, justified by the presence of heartbeat and/or respirations
• Subject is alive and in normal condition, confirmed by the vital signs behavior within the predefined range indicating normal condition
• Subject condition is changing, based on detection of the specified variations of the vital signs, such as detected rates outside of specific range, or specified behavior of the vital signs related to their rate of change. These events can be divided in the categories, related to the high probability that the subject is:
o falling to sleep;
o waking up;
o getting excited;
o getting relaxed;
o undergoing significant health condition, such as immediately preceding giving birth, characterized by the increased heartbeat and respiratory rates, e.g. in animals; o undergoing abnormal health condition, such as respiratory irregularities in sleep; o undergoing emergency health condition, such as abrupt abnormal change of the heartbeat and/or respiratory rates, e.g. in case of SIDS.
In entities 711 and 712 respective rates are compared with the set of previously detected values, or predefined thresholds, which are provided by entities 715 and 716. All information is provided to the entity 720. Entities 715 and 716 are updated with the new rates and corresponding rates of change. Entities 715 and 716 contain the history of the subject biomarkers information, particularly including:
• Rate information in specific predefined time steps;
• Averaged information of rate over at least one predefined period;
• Rate of change information in specific predefined time steps;
• Averaged information of rate of change over at least one predefined period;
• Comparison thresholds for rate;
• Comparison thresholds for rate of change.
Comparison thresholds may be predefined or statistically calculated based on the stored data.
In particular, the entities 715 and 716 have models and ranges for biomarkers rates and biomarkers rates of change, representing high probability of specific events.
Time information entity 717 is providing additional information to entity 720, including current local time information, which is used in the event calculation.
Event calculation entity 720 is calculating the event score based on a weighted sum of the following information set:
• Heartbeat rate value reduced below calculated or predefined threshold.
• Rate of change of the heartbeat rate achieved calculated or predefined threshold.
• Respiratory rate value reduced below calculated or predefined threshold.
• Rate of change of the respiratory rate achieved calculated or predefined threshold.
• Duration of the continuous values above calculated or predefined thresholds.
• Part of the day: morning, daytime, evening, night, late night.
The weighting factors are predefined or determined based on the information set, predefined values and subject's behavior statistics. If the score is above the threshold, the appropriate event category is determined. This information is communicated to the entity 71. Based on this information, the entity 71 is initiating predefined actions using entity 60 and/or entity 50 where optional audio and visual indication/alert capability is included.
These actions may be:
• Sending the heartbeat and/or respiratory related information such as:
o Appearance or disappearance;
o Rates;
o Rates outside of the specified range;
o Rate of change of the rates;
o Rate of change of the rates outside of the specified range.
• Sending the corresponding time-stamp information.
• Activating audio and/or visual indication/alert functionality.
This information may be sent to:
• Cloud-based web service for vital signs monitoring;
• User mobile device, such as smart phone;
• Fixed monitoring infrastructure.
In Fig. 5 two antenna high-gain arrangements are shown. Systems 21 and 22 are on the left and right side of the integrated front end entity 10. The arrangement 2 may be considered as the preferred embodiment, providing preferable tradeoff in size and performance, having the front size dimensions of the complete apparatus 100 of 4 x 2 cm or less for the 60 GHz ISM band operation. The antenna system is preferably realized as the planar printed dipoles with ellipsoid-like antenna shapes, with the two parts printed on the opposite sides of the dielectric layer, which also provides mechanical support. Prints on the opposite side of the dielectric are depicted using dashed lines in the Fig. 5. Cross section presented in Fig. 6 shows antenna printed on the opposite sides of the dielectric layer, as well as metalized reflector at the distance of approximately one quarter of the signal wavelength. The space between the reflector and the antenna may be empty or filled with foam. The antenna parts 21 and 22 are fed by the symmetrical lines printed on both sides of the dielectric approaching dipoles perpendicularly to their arrangement, as shown in the Fig. 5. Symmetrical strip line may be advantageously connected to differential mm-wave inputs and outputs of the entity 10 by using micro-vias produced by an advanced polymer technology. This is illustrated in of Fig. 6.
Supporting circuitry 50 as a part of the apparatus 100 may include loudspeaker and/or visual indication/alert functionality having plurality of possible realizations.
Alternatively instead of using two high gain antennas one for Tx 22 and one for Rx 21, the proposed system may be realized by one high gain antenna for both Rx and Tx functionality, 24 like in Fig, 9a) and Fig. 9b) and isolator functionality 23. This approach has several system disadvantages of the difficult practical realization of the entity 23 providing sufficient isolation between Rx and TX inputs of the entity 10. Also entity 23 inherently includes unwanted signal attenuation of the TX signal toward antenna and received signal from antenna toward the RX input of the entity 10. This imposes more power consumption of the system, more thermal dissipation, and more system cost on isolator entity 23 realization. Entity 23 could be preferably realized by rat race planner coupler structures, also on the IC level within the entity 10 or on the PCB level, where the entity 10 is assembled in the
Apparatus 100. The only potential system related sensor advantage would be the reduced size of the apparatus 100, where the one planar high gain antenna would need to be integrated instead of two.
The usage of the IQ demodulator instead of signal mixer in entity 10, would provide the two analog baseband down converted quadrature signals to the entity 30. Having two signals in the signal processing path additional information about phase changes between two signal may be used. This may increase the accuracy in the digital signal processing and some redundancy, by the expense of the more chip size of entity 10 and more processing efforts of the entity 40. The method of operation may use the straight forward information obtained from the one down conversion chain from I or from Q chain, and do not process the information from other chain, as long there is no need in more accurate information extraction. The existence of the both chains, with 90 degrees moved zero crossings, may have practical advantages. By evaluating the phase changes of the IQ signals, with the typical accuracy of 1-2 degrees resolution, micro movements of the objects may be evaluated with more accuracy, within one wave length typically in μιη region. This may increase the capability of the frequency extraction.
Claims
Claim 1: Mm-wave Radar Driver Vital Signs Sensor Apparatus and Method of Operation 100, where mm-wave declares operation between 30 and 300 GHz, is including:
1. High-gain planar antenna for transmitting mm-wave radio signals 22, where the high-gain planar antenna has at least two radiation elements;
2. High-gain planar antenna for receiving mm-wave radio signals 21, where the high-gain planar antenna has at least two radiation elements;
3. Integrated mm-wave radio front end 10, implemented in arbitrary semiconductor technology, having on-chip integrated mm-wave voltage controlled oscillator, mm-wave power amplifier, mm-wave low noise amplifier, mm-wave down conversion mixer, digital control interface, power supply circuitry and PLL;
4. Analog to digital conversion entity 30;
5. Digital processing functionality 40 including controlling functionality 41 and calculation and memory capacity for performing digital signal processing by arbitrary type of the realization options;
6. Supporting circuitry 50, including mechanical interface to the environment and supporting power supply related circuitry.
where apparatus 100 is integrated in the baby incubator, facing the baby, which is the subject under observation, with a direct line-of-sight operation and where Method of Operation includes:
• Transmission of mm-wave signals generated in 10 using 22;
• Receiving mm-wave signals reflected from subject's body using 21;
• Amplification of the reflected signal in 10;
• Down-conversion of the signals by mixing with the same signal of the same frequency as the transmitted signal in 10;
• Amplification of the converted signal after mixer in 10;
• Analog filtering of the signals after amplification in 10;
• Signal conditioning in 10 for subsequent analog to digital conversion performed by 30;
• Digital processing of the signal in 40, by:
o Extracting the heartbeat rate from the previous arbitrary processed signal; o Extracting the rate of change of the heartbeat rate from the previous arbitrary processed signal;
o Extracting the respiratory rate from the previous arbitrary processed signal; o Extracting the rate of change of the respiratory rate from the previous arbitrary processed signal;
o Digital processing in vital signs event decision functionality 70 which includes the following steps:
■ Evaluation if the heartbeat rate is within the specified range 711;
■ Evaluation if the respiratory rate is within the specified range 712;
■ Evaluation if the rate of change of the heartbeat rate is within specified range 713,
■ Evaluation if the rate of change of the respiratory rate is within specified range 714;
■ Statistical evaluation of the subject's heartbeat rate data history 715;
■ Statistical evaluation of the subject's respiratory rate data history 716;
■ Provision of the current heartbeat rate by the entity 711 and the current rate of change of the heartbeat rate by the entity 713 to the subject's statistical heartbeat rate model entity 715;
■ Provision of the current respiratory rate by the entity 716 and the current rate of change of the respiratory rate by the entity 713 to the subject's statistical respiratory rate model entity 716;
■ Digital processing in vital signs event calculation decision functionality 720 is performed, which:
• Calculates the score by processing the information provided through entities 711-717 weighted by the specified coefficients, where the score is related to the probability of the corresponding vital signs event;
• In case that the calculated score is above predefined threshold, decision on positive vital signs event is made;
• In case of the positive vital signs event the entity 720 sends the decision information and the corresponding score to the entity 71;
• In case of the positive vital signs event the entity 71 initiates appropriate specified actions of the entity 60 and/or entity 50.
where the vital signs event is: the stop of the subject's vital activity.
Claim 2: System according to Claim 1, in which the apparatus 100 is mechanically attached to the baby bed, instead of being integrated in baby incubator.
Claim 3: System according to Claim 1, in which the apparatus 100 is mechanically attached to the baby carriage, instead of being integrated in baby incubator.
Claim 4: System according to Claim 1, in which the apparatus 100 is mechanically attached to the patient bed in medical care environment, instead of being integrated in baby incubator, and where the complete method of operation is related to the patient as the subject under observation.
Claim 5: System according to Claim 1, in which apparatus 100 is positioned in the area in which the subject under observation resides, instead of being integrated in baby incubator, and where the complete method of operation is related to the subject under observation.
Claim 6: System according to Claim 1, in which the apparatus 100 is mechanically attached to an exercise machine, instead of being integrated in baby incubator, and where the complete method of operation is related to the person using the exercise machine as the subject under observation.
Claim 7: System according to Claim 1, in which the apparatus 100 is positioned in the area in which the animal under observation resides, instead of being integrated in baby incubator, and where the complete method of operation is related to the animal as the subject under observation.
Claim 8: System according to Claims 1 to 7, where the vital signs event is: change of the subject's vital signs.
Claim 9: System according to Claims 1 to 7, where the vital signs event is: change pattern of the vital signs of the subject under observation, where the pattern is defined by the:
a) specific value thresholds,
b) specific rate of change value thresholds,
where each is in specific time window.
Claim 10: System according to Claims 1 to 9, where wireless interface 63, which implements one or more than one wireless communication standards, is part of the Apparatus 100;
Claim 11: System according to Claim 10, where wireless interface 63, which implements one or more than one wireless communication standards, is used for communication with the user's mobile device.
Claim 12: System according to Claim 10, where wireless interface 63, which implements one or more than one wireless communication standards, is used for communication with cloud-based web service application.
Claim 13: System according to Claim 10 where wireless interface 63, which implements one or more than one wireless communication standards, is used for communication with the health related emergency service.
Claim 14: System according to previous Claims, in which the supporting circuitry 50 contains audio and/or visual alerting capabilities of arbitrary realization, which are activated in case the vital signs event is detected by the entity 71.
Claim 15: System according to previous Claims, in which the mm-wave frequency is within 60 GHz ISM band.
Claim 16. System according to previous Claims, in which the sensor apparatus and method of operation 100 has only one high gain antenna for transmitting and receiving mm-wave radio signals 24, where the high-gain planar antenna has at least two radiation elements and isolator functionality 23 being released by plurality of the realization option, providing isolation between Rx and Tx chains, and related Rx and Tx connection to high gain antenna 24.
Claim 17. System according to previous Claims, in which the sensor apparatus and method of operation 100 has entity 10 having instead of mm-wave down conversion mixer, the IQ Demodulator, and two signal conditioning chains instead of one.
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RS20140247A RS20140247A1 (en) | 2014-05-14 | 2014-05-14 | Radar sensor operating in millimetre wave frequency range for detection of signs of life and method of its operation |
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