Locatable-body temperature monitoring based on semi-active UHF RFID tags

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Abstract

This paper presents the use of radio-frequency identification (RFID) technology for the real-time remote monitoring of body temperature, while an associated program can determine the location of the body carrying the respective sensor. The RFID chip's internal integrated temperature sensor is used for both the human-body temperature detection and as a measurement device, while using radio-frequency communication to broadcast the temperature information. The adopted RFID location technology makes use of reference tags together with a nearest neighbor localization algorithm and a multiple-antenna time-division multiplexing location system. A graphical user interface (GUI) was developed for collecting temperature and location data for the data fusion by using RFID protocols. With a puppy as test object, temperature detection and localization experiments were carried out. The measured results show that the applied method, when using a mercury thermometer for comparison in terms of measuring the temperature of the dog, has a good consistency, with an average temperature error of 0.283 °C. When using the associated program over the area of 12.25 m2, the average location error is of 0.461 m, which verifies the feasibility of the sensor-carrier location by using the proposed program. © 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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APA

Liu, G., Mao, L., Chen, L., & Xie, S. (2014). Locatable-body temperature monitoring based on semi-active UHF RFID tags. Sensors (Switzerland), 14(4), 5952–5966. https://doi.org/10.3390/s140405952

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