112,99 €
An authoritative guide to the theory, technologies, and state-of-the-art applications in microwave noncontact sensing and analysis
Engineering researchers have recently developed exciting advances in microwave noncontact sensing and analysis, with new applications in fields ranging from medicine to structural engineering, manufacturing to transportation. This book provides an authoritative look at the current state-of-the-art in the field.
Drawing upon their years of experience in both cutting-edge research and industry applications, the authors address microwave radar for both noncontact vital sign detection and mechanical movement measurement. They explore key advances in everyday applications of microwave and Doppler radar, especially in the areas of radio frequency technologies, microelectronic fabrication processes, and signal processing hardware and algorithms.
Microwave Noncontact Motion Sensing and Analysis:
An important resource for engineers and researchers with a professional interest in micro-wave sensing technology, Microwave Noncontact Motion Sensing and Analysis is also a source of insight and guidance for professionals in healthcare, transportation safety, the military, and law enforcement.
Sie lesen das E-Book in den Legimi-Apps auf:
Seitenzahl: 270
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2013
Table of Contents
Series
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
1.1 Background
1.2 Recent Progress on Microwave Noncontact Motion Sensors
1.3 About This Book
Chapter 2: Theory of Microwave Noncontact Motion Sensors
2.1 Introduction to Radar
2.2 Mechanism of Motion Sensing Radar
2.3 Key Theory and Techniques of Motion Sensing Radar
Chapter 3: Hardware Development of Microwave Motion Sensors
3.1 Radar Transceiver
3.2 Radar Transponders
3.3 Antenna Systems
Chapter 4: Advances in Detection and Analysis Techniques
4.1 System Design and Optimization
4.2 Numerical Methods: Ray-Tracing Model
4.3 Signal Processing
Chapter 5: Applications and Future Trends
5.1 Application Case Studies
5.2 Development of Standards and State of Acceptance
5.3 Future Development Trends
5.4 Microwave Industry Outlook
References
Index
Wiley Series in Microwave and Optical Engineering
Copyright © 2014 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey
Published simultaneously in Canada
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section~107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750-8400, fax (978) 750-4470, or on the web at www.copyright.com. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, (201) 748-6011, fax (201) 748-6008, or online at http://www.wiley.com/go/permission.
Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither the publisher nor author shall be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial damages, including but not limited to special, incidental, consequential, or other damages.
For general information on our other products and services or for technical support, please contact our Customer Care Department within the United States at (800) 762-2974, outside the United States at (317) 572-3993 or fax (317) 572-4002.
Wiley also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic formats. For more information about Wiley products, visit our web site at www.wiley.com.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Li, Changzhi, 1982
Microwave noncontact motion sensing and analysis / Changzhi Li, Jenshan Lin.
pages cm
Includes index.
ISBN 978-0-470-64214-6 (hardback)
1. Motion detectors. 2. Microwave detectors. 3. Motion--Measurement. 4. Radar. I. Lin, Jenshan, 1964- II. Title.
TK7882.M68L53 2013
681'.2--dc23
2013014155
To our families who have been patient with us,
and our colleagues who have been working with us
on this interesting research subject.
By sending a microwave signal toward a target and analyzing the reflected echo, microwave radar sensors may be used for noncontact motion sensing in many applications. Typical applications range from long distance detection, such as weather radar and automobile speed radar, to short distance monitoring, such as human vital sign detection and mobile tumor tracking. While some speed detection and navigation devices are well known and have been used in the field for decades, other applications based on recent advancements in microwave sensing technologies show great promise and attract interest from practitioners. For example, the principle of detecting motion based on phase shift in a reflected radar signal can be used to sense tiny physiological movements induced by breathing and heartbeat, without any sensor attached to the body. This remote vital sign detection method leads to several potential applications, such as searching for survivors after earthquakes, and monitoring sleeping infants or adults to detect abnormal breathing conditions. Another recent advance in the microwave motion sensing technology is the extension from detecting one-dimensional to two-dimensional rotational movement, which can be used to monitor the spin speed of motors and servos in macroscale machineries and microscale microelectromechanicalsystem (MEMS) devices.
These emerging technologies for health care and industrial sensing provide the advantage of neither confining nor inhibiting the target, as other contact-based technologies do. They enable fast remote identification of hidden target signatures, indicating promising applications in remote diagnosis, search, monitoring, and surveillance. Sensors may be used for the monitoring and treatment of sleep apnea and sudden infant death syndrome. They can outperform other technologies in motion-adaptive tumor tracking during cancer radiotherapy in many anatomic sites. When configured as a nonlinear vibrometer, the radar will also advance approaches to monitoring rotating and reciprocating machinery in the transportation and manufacturing industries. This may positively impact our society through dynamic structural health monitoring, as many buildings worldwide are structurally deficient or functionally obsolete.
While the emerging microwave motion sensing technologies predict attractive ways to replace traditional devices, they generally involve sophisticated hardware and signal analysis that leverage modern design, fabrication, and signal processing methods. Some of the technologies are positioned at the crossroads of electrical engineering, health care and life science, civil engineering, and micro fabrication. With growing interest in multidisciplinary development in the engineering community, researchers and engineers have created various microwave motion sensor front-end architectures and baseband methods.
Although researchers are working on microwave motion sensing technology, and a large number of articles have been published in recent years on state-of-the-art applications, there are not many books that review this technology and unveil the trends of future development. This book aims to review the fundamentals of microwave radar, discusses the state-of-the-art developments, and illustrates future trends.
This book is organized as follows. Chapter 1 introduces the background and recent progress on microwave noncontact motion sensors. Chapter 2 reviews theory and fundamentals of microwave motion sensors. It presents general information about antennas, electromagnetic propagation, link budget, and signal processing. Then it covers typical types of motion sensing radar including Doppler radar, pulse radar, and frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar. Chapter 2 also discusses the key theory and techniques of motion sensing radar. The recent hardware developments of microwave motion sensor are discussed in Chapter 3, including radar transceiver architectures, antenna systems, and special building blocks. In Chapter 4, advances in detection and analysis techniques are discussed, covering system considerations, modeling, simulation, and signal processing. Several application case studies are provided in the first part of Chapter 5, followed by discussion on development of standards and state of acceptance. Finally, future development trends and microwave industry outlook are presented in Chapter 5.
The authors have years of experience working together on microwave noncontact motion sensing technologies from bench-top modules to CMOS integrated microchips, covering a frequency range of over 30 GHz. Besides presenting the history, theory, and technical details of related technologies, the authors provide plenty of application-oriented case studies. Furthermore, the authors exemplify the tight connections of this technology to healthcare, industrial, and military services. Potential research booms are also illustrated to scientists from microwave, electronic circuit, signal processing, and healthcare perspectives.
The authors give their respects to Prof. James Lin at the University of Illinois at Chicago, who pioneered the research of radar noncontact vital sign detection. The authors would like to acknowledge Drs. Arye Rosen, Aly Fathy, and Hao Ling for providing valuable review to the book proposal. Their valuable comments are very much appreciated. The authors would also like to thank their colleagues T.-S. Jason Horng, Olga Boric-Lubecke, Victor Lubecke, Lixin Ran, Jian Li, Wenhsing Wu, Michael Weiss, and Xiaolin “Andy” Li for their valuable discussions and collaborations in the past decade. In addition, the valuable contributions from students who worked diligently on radar motion sensing projects at the University of Florida and Texas Tech University: Yanming Xiao, Changzhan Gu, Te-Yu Jason Kao, Yan Yan, Xiaogang Yu, Gabriel Reyes, Julie Cummings, Jeffrey Lam, and Eric Gravesare are greatly acknowledged. Last but not least, the authors would also like to thank Tien-Yu Huang, Bozorgmehr Vosooghi, and Yiran Li for assistance in preparing figures, indexing, and proofreading the manuscript.
The intended audience of this book includes microwave engineers and researchers, microwave application engineers, researchers in healthcare institutes, developers of military and security equipment, and biomedical engineers.
Changzhi Li and Jenshan Lin
Microwave radar has been used for remote sensing applications for many years. Most common applications include displacement and low velocity measurement (Kim and Nguyen, 2003; Kim and Nguyen, 2004; Benlarbi et al., 1990; Rasshofer and Biebl, 1999), distance and position sensing (Stezer et al., 1999), automobile speed sensing (Meinel, 1995), and vital sign detection (Lin, 1992). Traditionally, microwave radar can be divided into two categories: the pulse radar and the Doppler radar. The pulse radar determines the target range by measuring the round-trip time of a pulsed microwave signal. It does not directly measure the velocity of a target but the velocity can be calculated. The Doppler radar, on the other hand, measures the velocity of a target directly. If the target has a velocity component, the returned signal will be shifted in frequency, due to the Doppler effect. On the hardware side, the pulse radar uses powerful magnetrons to generate microwave signals with very short pulses of applied voltage. In order to overcome the pulse radar's disadvantage of high cost due to the expensive magnetron, the frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar was invented in recent years. Compared with the pulse radar, the FMCW radar can be integrated with solid-state technology, and has the advantages of superior target definition, low power, and better clutter rejection. However, the FMCW radar requires accurate control (modulation) of both the frequency and amplitude of the transmitted signal, and is mainly used for range detection. To measure both the displacement and the velocity, a system using millimeter-wave interferometry (Kim and Nguyen, 2003) was reported. It used a quadrature mixer to realize the coherent phase-detection process effectively. It has a very high detection resolution, but has a limit on the minimum measurable speed (Kim and Nguyen, 2004).
With contributions from many researchers in this field, new detection methods and system architectures have been proposed to improve the detection accuracy and robustness. The advantage of noncontact/covert detection has drawn interest on various applications. While many of the reported systems are bench-top prototypes for concept demonstration, several portable systems and integrated radar chips have been demonstrated.
The development of various instrumentations and techniques for vibration measurement and analysis has become increasingly important. Conventional vibration sensing elements comprise displacement or velocity transducers. One of the most widely used is the accelerometer. A piezoelectric-based accelerometer can produce an electrical output proportional to the vibratory acceleration of the target it is attached to. Another contact measurement instrument is the linear variable differential transformer (LVDT), which works as a displacement transducer that can measure the vibratory displacement directly.
Some of noncontact vibration measurement instruments are laser based, such as laser Doppler vibrometer, laser interferometer, and laser displacement sensor. These devices are usually expensive and have their limitations as well, such as inevitable calibration and narrow detection range. On the other hand, microwave/millimeter-wave interferometer or vibrometer has been used for applications in instrumentation such as plasma diagnostics and nondestructive characterization of material.
Millimeter-wave interferometric sensor with submillimeter resolution has been reported by Kim and Nguyen (2003). Resolving displacement within a fraction of a carrier wavelength, the sensor has high resolution in submillimeter range. The sensor system operates in Ka-band and is completely fabricated using microwave and millimeter-wave integrated circuits. Radio frequency (RF) vibrometer based on nonlinear Doppler phase modulation effect (Li and Lin, 2007a) has also been reported most recently. It detects vibration movement by analyzing the relative strength of vibration-caused harmonics at the radar baseband output. With a quadrature architecture supporting a complex signal demodulation technique, the RF vibrometer realizes the measurement of not only a purely sinusoidal periodic movement, but also vibrations comprised of multiple sine waves of different frequencies. Compared with laser-based sensors, microwave/millimeter-wave interferometer and vibrometer can have a low cost and a much larger detection range.
The principle of detection based on frequency or phase shift in a reflected radar signal can be used to detect tiny body movements induced by breathing and heartbeat, without any sensor attached to the body. There are several advantages to a noncontact vital sign detection solution: physically, it neither confines nor inhibits the subject, making the detector ideal for long-term continuous monitoring applications. Also, the reliability can be increased as a subject is unaware of the measurement and therefore is less likely to alter their vital signs. Additionally, accuracy is enhanced because of the lack of surface loading effects that have been shown to reduce the accuracy of some other measurement methods. This noncontact remote detection of vital signs leads to several potential applications such as searching for survivors after an earthquake and monitoring sleeping infants or adults to detect abnormal breathing conditions.
While the concept of noncontact detection of vital signs has been successfully demonstrated by pioneers in this field before 2000 (Lin, 1975; Chuang et al., 1991; Lin, 1992; Chen 1986), research efforts in this century have been moving the technology development toward lower power, lighter weight, smaller form factor, better accuracy, longer detection range, and more robust operation for portable and handheld applications. Among many possible applications this technology can be used for, healthcare seems to be drawing most of the interest. As an example, a baby monitor using this technology was recently demonstrated (Li et al., 2009a). The baby monitor integrates a low power Doppler radar to detect tiny baby movements induced by breathing. If no movement is detected within 20 s, an alarm will be triggered. With growing interests in health and life sciences by the engineering community, many researchers have been contributing to technology advancement in this field. Although, many results were demonstrated using bench-top prototypes or board-level integration, their architectures still show the potential of being implemented on chip. In fact, there have been several reports of vital sign radar sensor chips based on various architectures (Droitcour et al., 2002; Droitcour et al., 2003; Li et al., 2008b; Li et al., 2009c; Li et al., 2010b).
Although, many researchers are working on the microwave motion sensing technology and a large number of articles have been published in recent years on state-of-the-art applications such as vital sign detection and interferometry, it is difficult to find a book that reviews this technology and unveils the trends of future development. This book first reviews the theory and fundamentals of microwave motion sensor in Chapter 2. It then discusses the hardware development of microwave motion sensor in Chapter 3, including radar transceiver architectures, antenna systems, and special building blocks. In Chapter 4, advances in detection and analysis techniques will be discussed, covering system consideration, modeling, and signal processing. Several application case studies will be provided in the first part of Chapter 5, followed by the discussion on development of standards and state of acceptance. Finally, future development trends and microwave industry outlook will be presented in Chapter 5.
This book not only covers the theory and technical details of related technologies, but also plenty of applications. The tight connections of this technology to healthcare, industrial, and military services will be exemplified in this book. Potential research opportunities will also be illustrated to scientists from the microwave, electronic circuit, signal processing, and healthcare points of view. The intended audience of this book includes microwave engineers and researchers, microwave application engineers, researchers in healthcare institutes, developers of military and security equipment, and scientists in biomedical engineering.
The word “radar” originally stands for radio detection and ranging. It is so commonly used today and the word has become a standard English noun. Although, it is often conceived as a technology developed during World War II, the history of radar actually extends back to the time well before World War II when researchers in many countries started the research that led to the development of radar (Page, 1962; Shipton, 1980; James, 1989; Chernyak and Immoreev, 2009; Guarnieri, 2010). In 1904, the first patent on the detection of objects using radio waves was given to the German engineer Hülsmeyer, who experimented with target detection by bouncing waves off a ship. The device was called Telemobiloskop by Hülsmeyer. In 1922, Marconi advocated this idea again. In the same year, Taylor and Young of the US Naval Research Laboratory demonstrated ship detection by radar, which was based on an interference pattern when a ship passed between transmitting and receiving antennas. In 1930, Hyland, a colleague of Taylor and Young, first detected an aircraft by radar, setting off a more substantial investigation that led to a US patent for today's continuous wave (CW) radar in 1934. After that, in the middle and late 1930s, largely independent developments of radar accelerated and spread in countries including the United States, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Japan, Italy, and the Netherlands (Swords, 1986; Watson, 2009; Richards, 2005).
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
