Abstract

Although the correlation between a glucose concentration and its permittivity is somewhat weak to be measured, the glucose concentration is a strong function of the dispersion. In terahertz or microwave frequencies, dispersion can be observed or measured along the interface between an object under test and a metamaterial or surface plasmonic surface, which is basically a metal structure characterized by periodically arrayed holes, grooves, or metal grating. In this work, we have focused on the method for improving the accuracy of a glucose measurement by proposing a new triple-band microwave sensor design and by measuring the resonant frequency shift associated with a glucose concentration at three frequencies simultaneously. A new triple-band glucose sensor of dimension (30 mm x 10 mm) was designed with the main sensing region as compact as 14 mm with two conducting microstrip lines on both ends of the sensor. The sensor design has been realized on a thin flexible substrate of 0.15 mm thickness. The proposed sensor has been designed to measure glucose concentration through the measurement of a resonant frequency shift at 650 MHz, 4.45 GHz, and 10.35 GHz. Overall, the glucose concentration has been found to be correlated positively and linearly with the resonant frequency shift at these frequencies.

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