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An in vitro demonstration of a passive, acoustic metamaterial as a temperature sensor with mK resolution for implantable applications

Lucrezia Maini, V. Genovés, Roman Furrer, Nikola Cesarovic, Christofer Hierold, Cosmin Roman

2024Microsystems & Nanoengineering15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Wireless medical sensors typically utilize electromagnetic coupling or ultrasound for energy transfer and sensor interrogation. Energy transfer and management is a complex aspect that often limits the applicability of implantable sensor systems. In this work, we report a new passive temperature sensing scheme based on an acoustic metamaterial made of silicon embedded in a polydimethylsiloxane matrix. Compared to other approaches, this concept is implemented without additional electrical components in situ or the need for a customized receiving unit. A standard ultrasonic transducer is used for this demonstration to directly excite and collect the reflected signal. The metamaterial resonates at a frequency close to a typical medical value (5 MHz) and exhibits a high-quality factor. Combining the design features of the metamaterial with the high-temperature sensitivity of the polydimethylsiloxane matrix, we achieve a temperature resolution of 30 mK. This value is below the current standard resolution required in infrared thermometry for monitoring postoperative complications (0.1 K). We fabricated, simulated, in vitro tested, and compared three acoustic sensor designs in the 29-43 °C (~302-316 K) temperature range. With this concept, we demonstrate how our passive metamaterial sensor can open the way toward new zero-power smart medical implant concepts based on acoustic interrogation.

Topics & Concepts

MetamaterialMaterials scienceUltrasonic sensorTransducerPolydimethylsiloxaneOptoelectronicsEnergy harvestingAcousticsMaximum power transfer theoremWireless sensor networkPower (physics)Electronic engineeringComputer scienceNanotechnologyPhysicsEngineeringQuantum mechanicsComputer networkAcoustic Wave Resonator TechnologiesAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsDielectric materials and actuators
An in vitro demonstration of a passive, acoustic metamaterial as a temperature sensor with mK resolution for implantable applications | Litcius