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Keywords = wireless passive temperature sensor

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29 pages, 7545 KB  
Article
AI-Enhanced IoT Mechatronic Platform for Assisted Mobility and Safety Monitoring in Small Dogs Based on Laser-Induced Graphene Contact Temperature Sensing
by Alan Cuenca-Sánchez, Fernando Pantoja-Suárez and Diego Segovia
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(6), 3100; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16063100 - 23 Mar 2026
Viewed by 110
Abstract
Assistive mobility devices for small animals require reliable monitoring to ensure safe and comfortable operation without increasing system complexity or invasiveness. This study presents a low-cost monitoring platform that integrates a laser-induced graphene (LIG) contact-temperature sensor into a passive mobility device for small [...] Read more.
Assistive mobility devices for small animals require reliable monitoring to ensure safe and comfortable operation without increasing system complexity or invasiveness. This study presents a low-cost monitoring platform that integrates a laser-induced graphene (LIG) contact-temperature sensor into a passive mobility device for small dogs, supported by a lightweight Internet of Things (IoT) architecture. The system combines contact temperature, ambient temperature, speed, and obstacle distance using an energy-aware acquisition strategy and prioritized wireless transmission for near-real-time monitoring. An unsupervised anomaly detection framework based on Isolation Forest identifies potentially unsafe operating conditions without labeled pathological data by leveraging absolute temperature and the differential feature ΔT between contact and ambient measurements. Experimental validation was conducted under controlled indoor conditions across six independent sessions with a small-breed dog, including static and dynamic phases to ensure repeatability. The system achieved packet delivery ratios of approximately 95%, with typical end-to-end latencies below 500 ms and worst-case delays below 850 ms. The proposed approach detected localized thermal deviations associated with friction or prolonged contact while remaining robust to normal activity- and environment-driven variations. These results demonstrate the feasibility of integrating LIG-based sensing and unsupervised analytics into assistive animal mobility platforms to enhance safety through continuous, non-invasive monitoring. Full article
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18 pages, 6502 KB  
Article
Design of a Passive Distributed RFID-Based Temperature Monitoring System for Grain Storage
by Qiuju Liang, Yuanwei Zhou, Guilin Yu, Zhiguo Wang, Wen Du, Hua Fan, Can Zhu, Zhenbing Li, Tong Yang and Gang Li
Electronics 2026, 15(4), 752; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15040752 - 10 Feb 2026
Viewed by 301
Abstract
In grain storage and transportation, biological activity, including respiration and metabolism, generates heat, creating temperature gradients that can induce moisture migration and form high-humidity areas. This accelerates fungal and insect activity, leading to quality degradation. Long-term, distributed temperature monitoring inside grain piles is [...] Read more.
In grain storage and transportation, biological activity, including respiration and metabolism, generates heat, creating temperature gradients that can induce moisture migration and form high-humidity areas. This accelerates fungal and insect activity, leading to quality degradation. Long-term, distributed temperature monitoring inside grain piles is essential for ensuring safe storage and early risk warning. Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology has become widely adopted in storage temperature monitoring due to its low cost, maintenance-free operation, and high security. However, traditional RFID systems have limited communication ranges, and the large size of storage facilities necessitates the deployment of multiple readers, which increases costs. Additionally, the high density and fluctuating moisture content of bulk grain lead to significant RF signal absorption and scattering, weakening the accessibility of purely wireless systems to deeper parts of the grain pile. To address these issues, a passive distributed temperature monitoring system based on RFID technology is proposed. The system utilizes RFID readers to harvest RF energy for passive power supply, with an external antenna ensuring stable energy harvesting and data transmission. Single-bus multi-point temperature sensor modules are integrated into the system, enabling distributed temperature measurements across grain piles or warehouses. Experimental results show that the system achieves a temperature collection success rate of 98%, with an accuracy of ±1 °C and a polling cycle of less than 30 s, providing a low-cost, battery-free, and scalable solution for grain storage monitoring, significantly improving storage quality. Full article
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17 pages, 3888 KB  
Article
Design of Wireless Passive Multi-Grid CSRR-SIW Sensor for Temperature and Pressure Monitoring
by Jian Jiang, Tao Di, Keyi Qian, Shang Gao, Linfang Qian, Hao Wang and Peng Gao
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 803; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16020803 - 13 Jan 2026
Viewed by 271
Abstract
To measure temperature and pressure parameters in harsh environments such as those with high temperature and high pressure, a wireless and passive multi-grid Complementary Split-Ring Resonator and substrate integrated waveguide (MG-CSRR-SIW) structure for a temperature and pressure sensor based on microwave scattering principles [...] Read more.
To measure temperature and pressure parameters in harsh environments such as those with high temperature and high pressure, a wireless and passive multi-grid Complementary Split-Ring Resonator and substrate integrated waveguide (MG-CSRR-SIW) structure for a temperature and pressure sensor based on microwave scattering principles and high-temperature co-fired ceramic (HTCC) technology is proposed. It can measure temperature within 25–1200 °C and pressure within 0–300 kPa. The structural design of the sensor by using high-frequency electromagnetic simulation software contributes to a linear relationship between the measured parameters and the sensor’s return loss (S11). Furthermore, the performance validation of the proposed sensor is implemented by sensor fabrication and experimentation. The test results show that the proposed sensor exhibits good performance of reliability and linearity. The temperature sensitivity is 199.33 kHz/°C and 379.75 kHz/°C in the temperature ranges of 25–475 °C and 475–1200 °C, respectively. In addition, the pressure sensitivity reaches 235.5 kHz/kPa at 800 °C. The maximum relative measurement error is 2.2% and 1.45% in regard to temperature and pressure, respectively. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Development and Application of Perception Sensors)
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24 pages, 2143 KB  
Article
Symmetry-Aided Active RIS for Physical Layer Security in WSN-Integrated Cognitive Radio Networks: Green Interference Regulation and Joint Beamforming Optimization
by Yixuan Wu
Symmetry 2025, 17(12), 2047; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym17122047 - 1 Dec 2025
Viewed by 431
Abstract
Driven by 5G/6G and the Internet of Things (IoT), wireless sensor networks (WSNs) are confronted with core challenges such as limited energy constraints, unbalanced resource allocation, and security vulnerabilities. To address these, WSNs are integrated with cognitive radio networks (CRNs) to alleviate spectrum [...] Read more.
Driven by 5G/6G and the Internet of Things (IoT), wireless sensor networks (WSNs) are confronted with core challenges such as limited energy constraints, unbalanced resource allocation, and security vulnerabilities. To address these, WSNs are integrated with cognitive radio networks (CRNs) to alleviate spectrum scarcity, and reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS) are adopted to enhance performance, but traditional passive RIS suffers from “double fading” (signal path loss from transmitter to RIS and RIS to receiver), which undermines WSNs’ energy efficiency and the physical layer security (PLS) (e.g., secrecy rate, SR) of primary users (PUs) in CRNs. This study leverages symmetry to develop an active RIS framework for WSN-integrated CRNs, constructing a tripartite collaborative model where symmetric beamforming and resource allocation improve WSN connectivity, reduce energy consumption, and strengthen PLS. Specifically, three symmetry types—resource allocation symmetry, beamforming structure symmetry, and RIS reflection matrix symmetry—are formalized mathematically. These symmetries reduce the degrees of freedom in optimization (e.g., cutting precoding complexity by ~50%) and enhance the directionality of green interference, while ensuring balanced resource use for WSN nodes. The core objective is to minimize total transmit power while satisfying constraints of PU SR, secondary user (SU) quality-of-service (QoS), and PU interference temperature, achieved by converting non-convex SR constraints into solvable second-order cone (SOC) forms and using an alternating optimization algorithm to iteratively refine CBS/PBS precoding matrices and active RIS reflection matrices, with active RIS generating directional “green interference” to suppress eavesdroppers without artificial noise, avoiding redundant energy use. Simulations validate its adaptability to WSN scenarios: 50% lower transmit power than RIS-free schemes (with four CBS antennas), 37.5–40% power savings as active RIS elements increase to 60, and a 40% lower power growth slope in multi-user WSN scenarios, providing a symmetry-aided, low-power solution for secure and efficient WSN-integrated CRNs to advance intelligent WSNs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Symmetry and Asymmetry in Wireless Sensor Networks)
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9 pages, 4397 KB  
Proceeding Paper
Extract Temperature Coefficients of LGS for High-Temperature Applications Based on the Finite Element Method
by Danyu Mu, Hong Zhang, Jikai Zhang, Yan Feng, Hao Jin and Shurong Dong
Eng. Proc. 2025, 110(1), 4; https://doi.org/10.3390/engproc2025110004 - 24 Nov 2025
Viewed by 350
Abstract
Surface-acoustic-wave (SAW) sensors with Langasite (LGS) substrate have broad prospects in the field of wireless passive temperature sensing in harsh environments. However, there are still challenges in terms of accuracy regarding the material temperature coefficient of LGS and the temperature simulation of heavy [...] Read more.
Surface-acoustic-wave (SAW) sensors with Langasite (LGS) substrate have broad prospects in the field of wireless passive temperature sensing in harsh environments. However, there are still challenges in terms of accuracy regarding the material temperature coefficient of LGS and the temperature simulation of heavy mass load electrodes. This paper presents a method for fitting the material temperature coefficient of LGS based on a combination of finite element simulation (FEM) and measured data. Eleven different cuts of LGS SAW resonators were fabricated, and the frequency response of each cut device at 30–800 °C was obtained through experiments. Some of the data were used in the training dataset and the material temperature coefficient of LGS was obtained through comsol simulation fitting. The remaining data were used as a test dataset to verify the accuracy of the results. The results show that the material coefficient obtained using this method has good accuracy in the frequency prediction of thick electrode LGS SAW sensors at different temperatures with different cuts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Proceedings of The 2nd International Conference on AI Sensors and Transducers)
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19 pages, 4201 KB  
Article
Implementation of an SS-Compensated LC-Thermistor Topology for Passive Wireless Temperature Sensing
by Seyit Ahmet Sis and Yeliz Dikerler Kozar
Sensors 2025, 25(20), 6316; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25206316 - 13 Oct 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 790
Abstract
This paper presents a passive wireless temperature sensor based on an SS-compensated LC-thermistor topology. The system consists of two magnetically coupled LC tanks—each composed of a coil and a series capacitor—forming a series–series (SS) compensation network. The secondary side includes a negative temperature [...] Read more.
This paper presents a passive wireless temperature sensor based on an SS-compensated LC-thermistor topology. The system consists of two magnetically coupled LC tanks—each composed of a coil and a series capacitor—forming a series–series (SS) compensation network. The secondary side includes a negative temperature coefficient (NTC) thermistor connected in series with its coil and capacitor, acting as a temperature-dependent load. Magnetically coupled resonant systems exhibit different coupling regimes: weak, critical, and strong. When operating in the strongly coupled regime, the original resonance splits into two distinct frequencies—a phenomenon known as bifurcation. At these split resonance frequencies, the load impedance on the secondary side is reflected as pure resistance at the primary side. In the SS topology, this reflected resistance is equal to the thermistor resistance, enabling precise wireless sensing. The advantage of the SS-compensated configuration lies in its ability to map changes in the thermistor’s resistance directly to the input impedance seen by the reader circuit. As a result, the sensor can wirelessly monitor temperature variations by simply tracking the input impedance at split resonance points. We experimentally validate this property on a benchtop prototype using a one-port VNA measurement, demonstrating that the input resistance at both split frequencies closely matches the expected thermistor resistance, with the observed agreement influenced by the parasitic effects of RF components within the tested temperature range. We also demonstrate that using the average readout provides first-order immunity to small capacitor drift, yielding stable readings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physical Sensors)
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22 pages, 7614 KB  
Article
Virtualized Computational RFID (VCRFID) Solution for Industry 4.0 Applications
by Elisa Pantoja, Yimin Gao, Jun Yin and Mircea R. Stan
Electronics 2025, 14(12), 2397; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14122397 - 12 Jun 2025
Viewed by 1493
Abstract
This paper presents a Virtualized Computational Radio Frequency Identification (VCRFID) solution that utilizes far-field UHF RF for sensing, computing, and self-powering at the edge. A standard UHF RFID system is asymmetric as it consists of a relatively large, complex “reader”, which acts as [...] Read more.
This paper presents a Virtualized Computational Radio Frequency Identification (VCRFID) solution that utilizes far-field UHF RF for sensing, computing, and self-powering at the edge. A standard UHF RFID system is asymmetric as it consists of a relatively large, complex “reader”, which acts as an RF transmitter and controller for a number of small simple battery-less “tags”, which work in passive mode as they communicate and harvest RF energy from the reader. Previously proposed Computational RFID (CRFID) solutions enhance the standard RFID tags with microcontrollers and sensors in order to gain enhanced functionality, but they end up requiring a relatively high level of power, and thus ultimately reduced range, which limits their use for many Internet-of-Things (IoT) application scenarios. Our VCRFID solution instead keeps the functionality of the tags minimalistic by only providing a sensor interface to be able to capture desired environmental data (temperature, humidity, vibration, etc.), and then transmit it to the RFID reader, which then performs all the computational load usually carried out by a microcontroller on the tag in prior work. This virtualization of functions enables the design of a circuit without a microcontroller, providing greater flexibility and allowing for wireless reconfiguration of tag functions over RF for a 97% reduction in energy consumption compared to prior energy-harvesting RFID tags with microcontrollers. The target application is Industry 4.0 where our VCRFID solution enables battery-less fine-grain monitoring of vibration and temperature data for pumps and motors for predictive maintenance scenarios. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue RFID Applied to IoT Devices)
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16 pages, 8659 KB  
Article
Dielectric Wireless Passive Temperature Sensor
by Taimur Aftab, Shah Hussain, Leonhard M. Reindl and Stefan Johann Rupitsch
J. Sens. Actuator Netw. 2025, 14(3), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/jsan14030060 - 6 Jun 2025
Viewed by 3911
Abstract
Resonators are passive components that respond to an excitation signal by oscillating at their natural frequency with an exponentially decreasing amplitude. When combined with antennas, resonators enable purely passive chipless sensors that can be read wirelessly. In this contribution, we investigate the properties [...] Read more.
Resonators are passive components that respond to an excitation signal by oscillating at their natural frequency with an exponentially decreasing amplitude. When combined with antennas, resonators enable purely passive chipless sensors that can be read wirelessly. In this contribution, we investigate the properties of dielectric resonators, which combine the following functionalities: They store the readout signal for a sufficiently long time and couple to free space electromagnetic waves to act as antennas. Their mode spectrum, along with their resonant frequencies, quality factor, and coupling to electromagnetic waves, is investigated using a commercial finite element program. The fundamental mode exhibits a too-low overall Q factor. However, some higher modes feature overall Q factors of several thousand, which allows them to act as transponders operating without integrated circuits, batteries, or antennas. To experimentally verify the simulations, isolated dielectric resonators exhibiting modes with similarly high radiation-induced and dissipative quality factors were placed on a low-loss, low permittivity ceramic holder, allowing their far-field radiation properties to be measured. The radiation patterns investigated in the laboratory and outdoors agree well with the simulations. The resulting radiation patterns show a directivity of approximately 7.5 dBi at 2.5 GHz. The sensor was then heated in a ceramic furnace with the readout antenna located outside at room temperature. Wireless temperature measurements up to 700 °C with a resolution of 0.5 °C from a distance of 1 m demonstrated the performance of dielectric resonators for practical applications. Full article
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22 pages, 5808 KB  
Article
Surface Acoustic Wave Sensor for Selective Multi-Parameter Measurements in Cardiac Magnetic Field Detection
by Hongbo Zhao, Chunxiao Jiao, Qi Wang, Chao Gao and Jing Sun
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(7), 3583; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15073583 - 25 Mar 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3553
Abstract
Measuring parameters like heart temperature, heart rate, and cardiac magnetic field aids in analyzing cardiac health and disease. A multi-parameter sensor tailored to the heart can significantly enhance convenience in medical diagnosis and treatment. This work introduces a multi-parameter sensor based on Surface [...] Read more.
Measuring parameters like heart temperature, heart rate, and cardiac magnetic field aids in analyzing cardiac health and disease. A multi-parameter sensor tailored to the heart can significantly enhance convenience in medical diagnosis and treatment. This work introduces a multi-parameter sensor based on Surface Acoustic Wave Sensors (SAWSs) and magnetostrictive materials, designed to selectively measure various cardiac parameters. SAWSs are characterized by their compact dimensions, which facilitate integration into various medical devices. The wireless and passive characteristics of the sensors enable flexibility in the detection process. This sensor can detect various common physical quantities like weak magnetic fields by the control variable method, ensuring a high degree of accuracy. The working mode of SAWSs is investigated in this study, and the relationship curve concerning various influencing factors is established. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Nanotechnology and Applied Nanosciences)
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14 pages, 7666 KB  
Article
Analysis of the Influence of Patch Antenna Shapes for Wireless Passive Temperature Sensor Applications
by Trisa Azahra, Ying-Ting Liao, Yi-Chien Chen and Cheng-Chien Kuo
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(6), 3136; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15063136 - 13 Mar 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1325
Abstract
Wireless passive temperature sensors are essential in environments where wired connections are impractical, such as rotating machinery and harsh conditions. A key advantage of these sensors is their ability to operate without a local power source. This study employs the antenna backscattering method, [...] Read more.
Wireless passive temperature sensors are essential in environments where wired connections are impractical, such as rotating machinery and harsh conditions. A key advantage of these sensors is their ability to operate without a local power source. This study employs the antenna backscattering method, which relies on the wireless interaction between the interrogator antenna and the sensor antenna’s resonant frequency, implemented in the far-field region to support long communication distances. To evaluate the impact of antenna shape on sensor performance, three microstrip patch antenna shapes—rectangular, circular, and equilateral triangular—were designed to operate in the fundamental mode at 2.4 GHz. These designs were simulated using HFSS in Ansys Electromagnetic Suite® 2023 R1 (Ansys Inc., Canonsburg, PA, USA), fabricated on alumina substrates, and assessed for performance metrics, including communication distance and sensitivity. Results indicated that the equilateral triangular patch outperformed the others, achieving a maximum communication distance of 16.5 cm, a sensitivity of 0.129 MHz/°C over a temperature range of 25 °C to 500 °C, and a simulated gain of 5.84 dBi. These findings underscore the importance of antenna shape selection and optimization for robust, wireless temperature sensing in demanding environments. Full article
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17 pages, 3415 KB  
Article
Sow and Piglet Behavior Characterization Using Visual Observation, Sensor Detection, and Video Recording
by Jun Ho Kim, Ji-Qin Ni, Wonders Ogundare, Allan P. Schinckel, Radiah C. Minor, Jay S. Johnson and Theresa M. Casey
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(6), 3018; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15063018 - 11 Mar 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2156
Abstract
Animal behaviors are key signs of animals’ stress, disease, and overall well-being. This study was conducted in an experimental farrowing building using eighteen sow pens: nine exposed to natural heat stress under summer indoor temperatures and nine receiving cooling treatments via innovative cooling [...] Read more.
Animal behaviors are key signs of animals’ stress, disease, and overall well-being. This study was conducted in an experimental farrowing building using eighteen sow pens: nine exposed to natural heat stress under summer indoor temperatures and nine receiving cooling treatments via innovative cooling pads. Sow and piglet behaviors were recorded in an ethogram through direct visual observation every 5 min for 48 h. Passive infrared detectors were used for continuous pig behavior monitoring every sec. Zmodo wireless cameras were used for video monitoring to validate sensor detection results. Visual observation revealed distinct pig behaviors between the treatments. The sows had peak times in eating, standing, and drinking approximately from 05:00 to 12:00 and from 16:00 to 22:00. The sows under heat stress spent 49.3% more time lying (p < 0.01). They spent 10.7% less time sleeping (p < 0.05). Piglets under heat stress spent more time sleeping but less time nursing. The sensor outputs and pig moving behaviors (i.e., sow eating + standing + drinking + sitting + piglet walking) had a strong positive correlation (ρ = 0.81 for heat stress and ρ = 0.74 for cooling). In contrast, there were strong-to-moderate negative correlations (ρ = −0.77 for heat stress and ρ = −0.56 for cooling) between the sensor outputs and sow on-body behaviors (i.e., sow lying + nursing + sleeping). Video recordings validated the response and sensitivity of the sensors, with them able to quickly capture changes in pig behaviors and provide behavioral information about the nuanced pig movements. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Engineering of Smart Agriculture—2nd Edition)
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18 pages, 9244 KB  
Article
A Novel Chipless Hybrid RFID Sensor for Metal Crack Detection
by Yamini Devidas Kotriwar, Mahmoodul Haq and Yiming Deng
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(5), 2303; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15052303 - 21 Feb 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2061
Abstract
RFID technology has been widely researched and used for structural health applications because of its compact, wireless, and scalable nature. This technology is divided into chipped and chipless sensors. Chipped sensors are costly due to their chipped tags, have narrowband operations, and contribute [...] Read more.
RFID technology has been widely researched and used for structural health applications because of its compact, wireless, and scalable nature. This technology is divided into chipped and chipless sensors. Chipped sensors are costly due to their chipped tags, have narrowband operations, and contribute to shortcomings in detection capability. Chipless tags provide real-time monitoring of cracks in harsh environments like high-temperature areas and high electromagnetic interference areas. This paper presents a design of a novel chipless hybrid circular-hexagon sensor that uses the frequency signature-based method for metal crack detection and characterization using wideband frequency. This sensor is small in size (16 mm × 16 mm × 1.4 mm) and easily mountable in hard-to-reach areas. It is a low-cost, passive chipless sensor that can wirelessly monitor the cracks in metallic structures. The radar cross-section of the chipless tag shows a shift in the resonant frequency of the tag under crack and no crack conditions. Key contributions of this work are that through simulations and experimental investigation, the tag is shown to be able to detect mm-scale cracks, validating the concept and correlating the presence and size of the cracks based on the shift in resonant frequencies in which a pair of Vivaldi antennas are used as a transmitter and receiver to connect to the VNA. The designed small sensor tag is tested in a benchtop setup with no prior calibration, imitating the real-time environment conditions for crack detection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Progress in Nondestructive Testing and Evaluation)
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17 pages, 4741 KB  
Article
Light-Activated Room Temperature Surface Acoustic Wave H2S Sensor Based on Bi2S3 Nanoribbons
by Chong Li, Sami Ramadan, Hao Kan and Lina Wang
Sensors 2025, 25(4), 1122; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25041122 - 12 Feb 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1375
Abstract
The expansion of the Internet of Things (IoT) has rendered wireless passive, highly stable, and room-temperature gas sensors indispensable for sensor applications. In this work, a room-temperature surface acoustic wave (SAW) H2S sensor based on a thin film of nano-mesh woven [...] Read more.
The expansion of the Internet of Things (IoT) has rendered wireless passive, highly stable, and room-temperature gas sensors indispensable for sensor applications. In this work, a room-temperature surface acoustic wave (SAW) H2S sensor based on a thin film of nano-mesh woven with Bi2S3 nanoribbons was successfully designed and prepared. The impact of varying inorganic salts solution ligand substitution of long-chain organic ligands of Bi2S3 films on performance was assessed. Notably, the responses of the sensors following ligand substitution exhibited improvement to varying degrees. In particular, the Cu(NO3)2-treated sensor to 10 ppm H2S was 203% of that of the untreated sensor. Furthermore, the impact of visible light activation on sensor performance was assessed. The results show the sensor has a high sensitivity to H2S molecules under yellow light activation at room temperature, with excellent selectivity, fast response speed and low detection limit. The sensor exhibited a response to 10 ppm H2S under yellow light activation that was approximately equal ~ two times greater than the response observed in a dark environment. This work provides a novel approach to enhance the performance of room-temperature SAW H2S sensors. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Exploring the Sensing Potential of Acoustic Wave Devices)
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19 pages, 3613 KB  
Article
Near-Field Passive Wireless Sensor for High-Temperature Metal Corrosion Monitoring
by Noah Strader, Brian R. Jordan, Oguzhan Bilac, Kevin M. Tennant, Daryl S. Reynolds, Edward M. Sabolsky and Ashley C. Daniszewski
Sensors 2024, 24(23), 7806; https://doi.org/10.3390/s24237806 - 6 Dec 2024
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2356
Abstract
This work focuses on the fabrication and evaluation of a passive wireless sensor for the monitoring of the temperature and corrosion of a metal material at high temperatures. An inductor–capacitor (LC) resonator sensor was fabricated through the screen printing of Ag-based inks on [...] Read more.
This work focuses on the fabrication and evaluation of a passive wireless sensor for the monitoring of the temperature and corrosion of a metal material at high temperatures. An inductor–capacitor (LC) resonator sensor was fabricated through the screen printing of Ag-based inks on dense polycrystalline Al2O3 substrates. The LC design was modeled using the ANSYS HFSS modeling package, with the LC passive wireless sensors operating at frequencies from 70 to 100 MHz. The wireless response of the LC was interrogated and received by a radio frequency signal generator and spectrum analyzer at temperatures from 50 to 800 °C in real time. The corrosion kinetics of the Cu 110 was characterized through thermogravimetric (TGA) analysis and microscopy images, and the oxide thickness growth was then correlated to the wireless sensor signal under isothermal conditions at 800 °C. The results showed that the wireless signal was consistent with the corrosion kinetics and temperature, indicating that these two characteristics can be further deconvoluted in the future. In addition, the sensor also showed a magnitude- and frequency-dependent response to crack/spallation events in the oxide corrosion layer, permitting the in situ wireless identification of these catastrophic events on the metal surface at high temperatures. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sensors for High Temperature Monitoring)
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21 pages, 6832 KB  
Article
A SAW Wireless Passive Sensing System for Rotating Metal Parts
by Yue Zhou, Jing Ding, Bingji Wang, Feng Gao, Shurong Dong and Hao Jin
Sensors 2024, 24(20), 6703; https://doi.org/10.3390/s24206703 - 18 Oct 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2095
Abstract
Passive wireless surface acoustic wave (SAW) sensors are very useful for on-site monitoring of the working status of machines in complex environments, such as high-temperature rotating objects. For rotating parts, it is difficult to realize real-time and continuous monitoring because of the unstable [...] Read more.
Passive wireless surface acoustic wave (SAW) sensors are very useful for on-site monitoring of the working status of machines in complex environments, such as high-temperature rotating objects. For rotating parts, it is difficult to realize real-time and continuous monitoring because of the unstable sensing signal caused by the continuous change of the relative position of the rotating part to the sensor and shielding of the signal. In our SAW sensing system, we propose a loop antenna integrated with the rotating part to obtain a stable sensing signal owing to its omnidirectional radiation pattern. Methodologies for determining the antenna dimension, system operating frequency, and procedures for designing a SAW sensor tag are discussed in this paper. By fully utilizing the influence of metal rotor on antenna performance, the antenna needs no impedance matching elements while it provides sufficient gain, which equips the antenna with nearly zero temperature drift at a wide temperature-sensing range. Experimental verification results show that this sensing system can greatly improve the stability of the sensing signal significantly and can achieve a temperature sensing accuracy of ~1 °C at different rotational speeds, demonstrated by the feasibility of the loop antenna for monitoring the working status of rotating metal parts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Electronic Sensors)
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